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The Design and Performance of an Astigmatic Laser Mode Converter. Alex Ellis, Stuyvesant High School Dr. Harold Metcalf and Dr. John No é, Stony Brook University. A What?.
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The Design and Performance of an Astigmatic Laser Mode Converter Alex Ellis, Stuyvesant High School Dr. Harold Metcalf and Dr. John Noé, Stony Brook University
A What? An astigmatic mode converter is a pair of cylindrical lenses, accompanied by mode-matching lenses, which introduce an astigmatic phase shift to a laser beam. In particular, it can convert Hermite-Gaussian (HG) rectangularly symmetric transverse modes into Laguerre-Gaussian (LG) circularly symmetric modes.
Hermite-Gaussian Modes • Rectangularly symmetric • Obtainable in spherical-planar resonator by adjusting plane mirror angle • Also obtainable by an intra-cavity crosswire, when the laser is operating in a multimode • Indices (m,n) refer to the number of intensity minima in the x and y directions HG0,1 HG1,2
Laguerre-Gaussian Modes (Optical Vortices) • Circularly Symmetric • Obtained by intra-cavity circular absorbers, computer-generated holograms, or an astigmatic mode converter • Photons have orbital angular momentum of l*hbar • Index l is the number of 2π phase shifts around the diameter LG3,0 LG1,1
Superpositions HG0,1+HG1,0 = HG0,1 rotated 45° HG0,1+i*HG1,0 =LG1,0 i represents a π/2 phase shift
Operating Principle of an Astigmatic Mode Converter Input The Guoy Phase 45° rotated HG0,1 • HG: (m+n+1)ψ(z) • LG: (l+2p+1)ψ(z) Ψ(z) = arctan(z/z0) Cylindrical Lenses • First introduces path length difference, altering the superposition due to the Guoy phase (astigmatism in the region) • Second one removes the introduced astigmatism
Mode Converter Rules Localized Astigmatism and Proper Guoy Phase Shift Mode-Matching A beam waist is required midway between the two cylindrical lenses w0, z0 w0’, z0’
Apparatus – The Laser Melles-Griot 05-LHB-570 Helium-Neon tube R=600mm spherical mirror, 295mm from plane mirror output coupler Adjustment of OC gives multimodes, and an intra-cavity crosswire on a translation stage selects particular HG modes
Apparatus – The Mode Converter f1 = 300mm fcyl = 150mm d1 = 513mm d2 = 481mm d3 = 212mm w0 = 246um z0 = 300mm w0’ = 227um z0’ = 256mm
Achieved Mode Conversions HG0,1 LG1,0 HG0,2 LG2,0 LG3,0 HG0,3 HG1,1 LG1,0 HG1,2 LG1,1
Performance – Multimodes CCD Image Voltage in Photodetector (V) 2.06 1.59 2.03 2.22 Optical Intensity (mW) 0.44 0.34 0.43 0.47 Achieved HG Modes (m,n) 01,01,02,03,bad01, bad11,bad1202,03, bad12 01,02,03,bad12 02,bad01 02,bad11,bad12
Performance – Mode Compositions d1 d1 d2 d2 Analysis of this particular mode gives PHG≈ 73% and PLG ≈ 27%
Applications • Generation of arbitrary order Bessel beams by use of an axicon • “Optical spanners” that both trap and spin microscopic particles • Further study involving the orbital angular momentum of light
Acknowledgements • Dr. Harold Metcalf • Dr. John Noé • Mr. Don Bucher • Mrs. Anne Manwell
Further Research • Change of mode converter parameters due to the increased spot size of high-order HG modes • Interferometry of LG beams with plane waves to investigate the spiral phase pattern • Measurement of the l*hbar per photon orbital angular momentum