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New paper and FiO 2009 presentation

A new publication is out: Yan Feng, Luke R. Taylor, and Domenico Bonaccini Calia, “25 W Raman-fiber-amplifier-based 589 nm laser for laser guide star,” Opt. Express 17, 19021-19026 (2009)

We report on a 25 W continuous wave narrow linewidth (< 2.3 MHz) 589 nm laser by efficient (> 95%) coherent beam combination of two narrow linewidth (< 1.5 MHz) Raman fiber amplifiers with a Mach-Zehnder interferometer scheme and frequency doubling in an external resonant cavity with an efficiency of 86%. The results demonstrate the narrow linewidth Raman fiber amplifier technology as a promising solution for developing laser for sodium laser guide star adaptive optics.

Basically it is a journal paper on the results I reported at CLEO Europe 2009 in Munich. It took almost three months to go through the review process, on an Express journal which supposes to extremely fast. The process is slow probably because the associated editor is busy. What is really odd is that the comments from one of the reviewers are apparently referring to another paper.

The process is so slow that the results are not up to date anymore. In these months, we have scaled the power from a single amplifier by a factor of two. Now we are able to obtain more than 25 W <2.3 MHz linewidth 589 nm laser with frequency doubling of a single narrow linewidth Raman fiber amplifier, which is the topic of our forth-coming Frontiers in Optics postdeadline paper: Yan Feng, Luke Taylor, Domenico Bonaccini Calia, Ronald Holzlöhner, and Wolfgang Hackenberg, 39 W narrow linewidth Raman fiber amplifier with frequency doubling to 26.5 W at 589 nm, PDPA4, Oct. 14, 2009,San Jose, California, USA. We have actually obtained 28 W right now. My colleague Ronald Holzlöhner will attend the conference and give the presentation.

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Works

CLEO Europe 2009, laser guide star, and Astrophotonics

On the CLEO Europe 2009 (which was already one month ago!), I presented our recent progresses in developing 589 nm laser for laser guide star adaptive optics. We had coherently beam combined two high power narrow linewidth Raman fiber amplifiers with an efficiency of 95%. After frequency doubling in an external resonant cavity, we have achieved 25 W 589 nm laser with a linewidth less than 2.3 MHz, which is limited by measurement resolution. I have put the slides online: 25 W CW Raman-fiber-amplifier-based 589 nm source for laser guide star.

The conference was intensive and very interesting for me. I noticed many talks and posters on yellow laser generation aiming at laser guide star application. Besides our works, most notable are optically pumped semiconductor lasers, long wavelength Yb fiber lasers, and Bismuth doped fiber lasers. Some new technologies may appear in the coming years, since so many researchers are looking at this direction.

I attended the talk by Prof. Joss Bland-Hawthorn on Astrophotonics. It appears that he had come to my blog and noticed my “concern“. He agreed that laser guide star is an important part of Astrophotonics. 🙂