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1.
Appl Opt ; 56(13): 3812-3816, 2017 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28463273

ABSTRACT

We report broad tunability of a femtosecond (fs) diode-pumped Cr:LiSAF laser mode-locked with a broadband saturable Bragg reflector (SBR). The SBR had seven pairs of AlxOy(n∼1.5) and Al0.17Ga0.83As(n∼3.5) layers in its Bragg stack, enabling a 250 nm reflectivity bandwidth around 850 nm. A 6-nm-thick strained In0.15Ga0.85As quantum well placed between Al0.17Ga0.83As cladding layers was used as a broadband saturable absorber in the 800-920 nm wavelength range. The laser was pumped by 6 single mode diodes-four at 640 nn and two at 660 nm. Mode locking was self-starting and fs pulses could be continuously tuned from 800 nm to 905 nm by an intracavity birefringent filter with an out-of-plane optic axis. The pulse widths varied from 70 fs to 255 fs as the laser was tuned. The laser had an 85.5 MHz repetition rate and the output power varied from 80 mW to 180 mW with tuning.

2.
Appl Opt ; 50(9): C36-40, 2011 Mar 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21460964

ABSTRACT

A novel robust optimization algorithm is demonstrated that is largely deterministic, and yet it attempts to account for statistical variations in coating. Through Monte Carlo simulations of manufacturing, we compare the performance of a proof-of-concept antireflection (AR) coating designed with our robust optimization to that of a conventionally optimized AR coating. We find that the robust algorithm produces an AR coating with a significantly improved yield.

3.
Opt Express ; 18(24): 24699-705, 2010 Nov 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21164816

ABSTRACT

We demonstrate a high-energy femtosecond laser system that incorporates two rapidly advancing technologies: chirally-coupled-core large-mode-area Yb-fiber to ensure fundamental-mode operation and high-dispersion mirrors to enable loss-free pulse compression while preserving the diffraction-limited beam quality. Mode-locking is initiated by a saturable absorber mirror and further pulse shortening is achieved by nonlinear polarization evolution. Centered at 1045 nm with 39-MHz repetition rate, the laser emits 25-nJ, positively chirped pulses with 970-mW average power. 6 bounces from double-chirped-mirrors compress these pulses down to 80 fs, close to their transform-limited duration. The loss-free compression gives rise to a diffraction-limited optical beam (M2 = 1.05).

4.
Opt Express ; 18(18): 19175-84, 2010 Aug 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20940813

ABSTRACT

We demonstrate a tunable laser frequency comb operating near 420 nm with mode spacing of 20-50 GHz, usable bandwidth of 15 nm and output power per line of ~20 nW. Using the TRES spectrograph at the Fred Lawrence Whipple Observatory, we characterize this system to an accuracy below 1m/s, suitable for calibrating high-resolution astrophysical spectrographs used, e.g., in exoplanet studies.

5.
Opt Lett ; 35(14): 2469-71, 2010 Jul 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20634866

ABSTRACT

We present a new approach for designing dispersion-engineered optics based on a simple unitless spectral quantity we call the phase distortion ratio (PDR). In contrast to minimizing the group delay dispersion (GDD) deviation from the ideal, minimizing the PDR is optimal in the sense that it minimizes the fraction of pulse energy lost to phase distortions. As an example, a mirror system optimized via PDR is empirically found to result in significantly better compression of single-cycle pulses than a system designed in terms of GDD. In the context of coupling pulse trains to cavities, minimizing the PDR of the cavity is shown to maximize throughput.

6.
Opt Lett ; 35(9): 1446-8, 2010 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20436598

ABSTRACT

We report a single-mode diode-pumped, passively mode-locked Cr:LiSAF laser with gigahertz (GHz) repetition rate and kilowatt peak power. A low-loss saturable Bragg reflector with low modulation depth and optimized dispersion compensation mirrors enables the generation of stable, cw mode-locked, sub-100-fs pulses at 1 GHz repetition rate around 865 nm when pumping with four or six laser diodes. Using a 0.25% output coupler and a total absorbed pump power of 0.9 W from six laser diodes, 55 fs, 110 pJ pulses are produced. This corresponds to 1.8 kW of peak power, which to our knowledge represents a record result for GHz Cr:colquiriite lasers.

7.
Opt Express ; 17(16): 14374-88, 2009 Aug 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19654845

ABSTRACT

We present three Cr3+:Colquiriite lasers as low-cost alternatives to Ti:Sapphire laser technology. Single-mode laser diodes, which cost only $150 each, were used as pump sources. In cw operation, with approximately 520 mW of absorbed pump power, up to 257, 269 and 266 mW of output power and slope efficiencies of 53%, 62% and 54% were demonstrated for Cr:LiSAF, Cr:LiSGaF and Cr:LiCAF, respectively. Record cw tuning ranges from 782 to 1042 nm for Cr:LiSAF, 777 to 977 nm for Cr:LiSGaF, and 754 to 871 nm for Cr:LiCAF were demonstrated. In cw mode-locking experiments using semiconductor saturable absorber mirrors at 800 and 850 nm, Cr:Colquiriite lasers produced approximately 50-100 fs pulses with approximately 1-2.5 nJ pulse energies at approximately 100 MHz repetition rate. Electrical-to-optical conversion efficiencies of 8% in mode-locked operation and 12% in cw operation were achieved.


Subject(s)
Lasers, Solid-State , Chromium/chemistry , Computer Simulation , Computer-Aided Design , Equipment Design , Equipment Failure Analysis , Light , Models, Theoretical , Scattering, Radiation
8.
Opt Express ; 16(25): 20699-705, 2008 Dec 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19065209

ABSTRACT

A self-referenced octave-spanning Ti:sapphire laser with 2.166 GHz repetition rate is demonstrated. The laser features both direct generation of octave-spanning spectra and a dual-output design for non-intrusive carrier-envelope (CE) phase-stabilization. Only a few percent of total power containing 1f and 2f spectral components is coupled out through a specially designed laser mirror and generates a >50 dB CE beat note in 100 kHz resolution bandwidth without perturbing the main output that still delivers octave-spanning spectra and 750 mW of output power.


Subject(s)
Aluminum Oxide/chemistry , Computer-Aided Design , Lasers , Models, Theoretical , Titanium/chemistry , Computer Simulation , Equipment Design , Equipment Failure Analysis , Light , Scattering, Radiation
9.
Appl Opt ; 47(14): 2630-6, 2008 May 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18470259

ABSTRACT

Optimized chirped mirrors may perform suboptimally, or completely fail to satisfy specifications, when manufacturing errors are encountered. We present a robust optimization method for designing these dispersion-compensating mirror systems that are used in ultrashort pulse lasers. Possible implementation errors in layer thickness are taken into account within an uncertainty set. The algorithm identifies worst-case scenarios with respect to reflectivity as well as group delay. An iterative update improves the robustness and warrants a high manufacturing yield, even when the encountered errors are larger than anticipated.

10.
Appl Opt ; 46(14): 2656-62, 2007 May 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17446914

ABSTRACT

A fully analytic method for computing gradients of dispersion (to any order) for a dielectric multilayer coating is developed, and it is demonstrated how group delay gradients can be used to optimize the dispersion of such a filter. The algorithm complexity is linear with the number of layers and quadratic in dispersion order. To our knowledge, this is the first published algorithm for computing exact analytic gradients of dispersion. We show an approximation that speeds up the computation significantly, making it linear in dispersion order. MATLAB and C code implementing the algorithms are made available.

11.
Opt Lett ; 31(13): 2063-5, 2006 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16770433

ABSTRACT

We present a new method for measuring the spectral phase of ultrashort pulses that utilizes spectral shearing interferometry with zero delay. Unlike conventional spectral phase interferometry for direct electric-field reconstruction, which encodes phase as a sensitively calibrated fringe in the spectral domain, two-dimensional spectral shearing interferometry robustly encodes phase along a second dimension. This greatly reduces demands on the spectrometer and allows for complex phase spectra to be measured over extremely large bandwidths, potentially exceeding 1.5 octaves.

12.
Appl Opt ; 45(7): 1478-83, 2006 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16539252

ABSTRACT

We demonstrate an inductive method for computing exact derivatives of reflection phase for layered media by using the transfer-matrix formalism. The algorithm scales linearly with the number of layers. We show a physically realistic approximation that leads to an efficient procedure for accurately computing dispersion significantly faster than with standard finite-difference methods. We discuss the theory behind the approximation and show results for a dispersion-compensating chirped mirror from a Ti: sapphire laser.

13.
Opt Express ; 14(12): 5829-37, 2006 Jun 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19516752

ABSTRACT

We demonstrate a new concept to vary the carrier-envelope phase of a mode-locked laser by a composite plate while keeping all other pulse parameters practically unaltered. The effect is verified externally in an interferometric autocorrelator, as well as inside the cavity of an octave-spanning femtosecond oscillator. The carrier-envelope frequency can be shifted by half the repetition rate with negligible impact on pulse spectrum and energy.

14.
Opt Lett ; 30(12): 1569-71, 2005 Jun 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16007810

ABSTRACT

We present a general design strategy for a broadband thin-film beam splitter with matched group-delay dispersion. By taking the substrate dispersion into account in the coating design, any combination of input and output can show the same dispersion for transmission and reflection. As a specific implementation, an ultrabroadband 50:50 beam splitter from 600 to 1500 nm for femtosecond laser applications was designed, fabricated, and characterized.

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