Coherent beam combination of seven 1.5 µm fiber amplifiers through up to 1 km atmospheric turbulence: near- and far-field experimental analysis
Author(s) -
Bastien Rouzé,
Laurent Lombard,
Hermance Jacqmin,
Anasthase Liméry,
Anne Durécu,
Pierre Bourdon
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
applied optics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.668
H-Index - 197
eISSN - 2155-3165
pISSN - 1559-128X
DOI - 10.1364/ao.433872
Subject(s) - optics , physics , turbulence , atmospheric turbulence , near and far field , atmospheric optics , beam (structure) , amplifier , free space optical communication , light beam , field (mathematics) , optical fiber , optical communication , meteorology , optoelectronics , mathematics , cmos , pure mathematics
A laser testbed based on active coherent beam combination (CBC) of seven 1.5 µm, 3 W fiber amplifiers was developed for applications requiring high power such as power density deposition on targets or free space laser communication. For the first time to our knowledge, the frequency-tagging locking of optical coherence by single-detector electronic-frequency tagging technique was implemented in the field in real atmospheric turbulence conditions in a target-in-the-loop configuration. Successful combination was achieved after horizontal propagation of 311 m and 1 km, at 1.5 m above the ground, while the estimated average turbulence strength was C n 2∼4.10 -14 m -2/3 . We present the CBC laser bench and an embedded near-field interferometer called PISTIL (PISton and TILt) able to measure the relative phase shift of each emitter. We show that this measurement can provide information on relative turbulence-induced phase variation of the combined laser beams. In particular, the far-field beam envelope wandering can be estimated through this diagnosis. Results are supported by an analytical model and confirmed by numerical post-analysis of measured far-field interference. This additional interferometer may improve CBC beam pointing through turbulence.
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