High-speed random access laser tuning.

Autor: Thompson DC; Los Alamos National Laboratory, MS E548, Los Alamos, New Mexico 87545, USA. dcthomp@lanl.gov, Busch GE, Hewitt CJ, Remelius DK, Shimada T, Strauss CE, Wilson CW, Zaugg TJ
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Applied optics [Appl Opt] 1999 Apr 20; Vol. 38 (12), pp. 2545-53.
DOI: 10.1364/ao.38.002545
Abstrakt: We have developed a technique for laser tuning at rates of 100 kHz or more using a pair of acousto-optic modulators. In addition to all-electronic wavelength control, the same modulators also can provide electronically variable Q-switching, cavity length and power stabilization, chirp and linewidth control, and variable output coupling, all at rates far beyond what is possible with conventional mechanically tuned components. Tuning rates of 70 kHz have been demonstrated on a radio-frequency-pumped CO2 laser, with random access to over 50 laser lines spanning a 17% range in wavelength and with wavelength discrimination better than 1 part in 1000. A compact tuner and Q-switch has been deployed in a 5-10-kHz pulsed lidar system. The modulators each operate at a fixed Bragg angle, with the acoustic frequency determining the selected wavelength. This arrangement doubles the wavelength resolution without introducing an undesirable frequency shift.
Databáze: MEDLINE