Claims
- 1. An optical interleaver, comprising:
a first birefringent crystal having a first surface for receiving a light beam in a direction perpendicular to the first surface, a second surface for allowing the light beam to exit the first birefringent crystal perpendicular to the second surface, and a third surface which acts as a front mirror for reflecting the light beam at an angle θ with respect to a line perpendicular to the third surface; a back mirror perpendicular to the front mirror and positioned a distance d from the front mirror for reflecting the light beam; a spacer region formed between the front and back mirrors; and a polarization beam splitter (PBS) adjacent to the second surface for splitting the light beam.
- 2. The optical interleaver as recited in claim 1, wherein the distance d is set to generate two interleaved signals with a desired channel spacing.
- 3. The optical interleaver as recited in claim 2, wherein the angle θ is set at about a Brewster angle to create front mirror reflectivity of about 2-10% and back mirror reflectivity of about 30-60%.
- 4. The optical interleaver as recited in claim 3, wherein the first birefringent crystal is sized such that the light beam will travel a distance L through the first birefringent crystal and satisfy the equation ΔnL=d cos θ, where Δn is the birefringence of the first birefringent crystal.
- 5. The optical interleaver as recited in claim 1, wherein the PBS is oriented at about 45 degrees with respect to a c-axis of the first birefringent crystal, the c-axis of the first birefringent crystal being perpendicular to a plane of incidence through which the light beam will pass.
- 6. The optical interleaver as recited in claim 5, further comprising a second birefringent crystal adjacent to the first surface for passing the light beam;
wherein the first birefringent crystal has a physical path length L1 and a c-axis of a first orientation; wherein Δn10 and Δn20 are birefringences of the first and second birefringent crystals at a reference temperature, respectively, and α1 and α2 are thermal expansion coefficients of the first and second birefringent crystals, respectively; wherein a second orientation of the c-axis of the second birefringent crystal is rotated about 90 degrees with respect to the first orientation if α1Δn10 and α2Δn20 are of a same sign, or the orientation of the c-axis of the second birefringent crystal is approximately parallel to the first orientation if α1Δn10 and α2Δn20 are of an opposite sign; and wherein the first and second birefringent crystals are sized to have physical path lengths L1 and L2 such that (Δn11L1+α1Δn10L1+Δn21L2+α2Δn20L2) is minimized.
- 7. The optical interleaver as recited in claim 6, further comprising two Babinet compensators adjacent to each other and to the second birefringent crystal for compensating for the phase retardance of the first and second birefringent crystals.
- 8. The optical interleaver as recited in claim 7, wherein the two Babinet compensators are wedge-shaped and offset with respect to each other in a direction perpendicular to the light beam to provide adjustable compensation for the phase retardance of the first and second birefringent crystals.
- 9. An optical interleaver, comprising:
a first polarization beam splitter (PBS) for receiving and reflecting an incident light beam and for generating a second output signal; a second PBS oriented with respect to the first PBS in a plane of incidence through which the incident and reflected incident light beams will pass for reflecting the reflected incident light beam; a birefringent crystal adjacent to the first and second PBSs and having a first surface for receiving the incident light beam and the reflected incident light beam, and a second surface which acts as a front mirror for reflecting the incident and reflected incident light beams in a direction perpendicular to the second surface; a back mirror perpendicular to the front mirror and positioned a distance d from the front mirror for reflecting the incident and reflected incident light beams; a spacer region formed between the front and back mirrors; first and second mirrors oriented in the plane of incidence through which the incident and reflected incident light beams will pass for reflecting the reflected incident light beams; and a third PBS oriented in the plane of incidence through which the light beam will pass for receiving the reflected incident light beams and generating a first output signal; wherein the front mirror is coated with two different anisotropic coatings such that the front and back mirrors and the spacer region form a dual Gires-Tournois Interferometer (GTI) for providing reflectivities needed for flat-top performance.
- 10. The optical interleaver as recited in claim 9, wherein the front mirror reflectivities are about 4-6% and the back mirror reflectivity is about 30-50%.
- 11. An method for optical interleaving, comprising:
receiving a light beam in a first birefringent crystal in a direction perpendicular to a first surface of the first birefringent crystal; reflecting the light beam off of a spectrally dispersive mirror at an angle θ with respect to a line perpendicular to the spectrally dispersive mirror, the spectrally dispersive mirror comprising a third surface of the first birefringent crystal acting as a front mirror and a back mirror perpendicular to and at a distance d from the third surface, the front and back mirrors sandwiching a spacer region; passing the light beam out of the first birefringent crystal in a direction perpendicular to a second surface of the first birefringent crystal; and splitting the light beam being passed out of the first birefringent crystal.
- 12. The method as recited in claim 1, further comprising selecting the distance d is set to generate two interleaved signals with a desired channel spacing.
- 13. The method as recited in claim 12, further comprising selecting the angle θ at about a Brewster angle to create front mirror reflectivity of about 2-10% and back mirror reflectivity of about 30-60%.
- 14. The method as recited in claim 13, further comprising sizing the first birefringent crystal such that the light beam will travel a distance L through the first birefringent crystal and satisfy the equation ΔnL=d cos θ, where Δn is the birefringence of the first birefringent crystal.
- 15. The method as recited in claim 11, further comprising splitting the light beam using a polarization beam splitter (PBS) oriented at about 45 degrees with respect to a c-axis of the first birefringent crystal, the c-axis of the first birefringent crystal being perpendicular to a plane of incidence through which the light beam will pass.
- 16. The method as recited in claim 15, further comprising:
passing the light beam through a second birefringent crystal adjacent to the first surface; sizing the first birefringent crystal to have a physical path length L1 and orienting the first birefringent crystal to have a c-axis of a first orientation; selecting the first and second birefringent crystals to have birefringences Δn10 and Δn20 at a reference temperature, respectively, and thermal expansion coefficients α1 and α2, respectively; orienting the c-axis of the second birefringent crystal to be rotated about 90 degrees with respect to the first orientation if α1Δn10 and α2Δn20 are of a same sign, or orienting the c-axis of the second birefringent crystal to be approximately parallel to the first orientation if α1Δn10 and α2Δn20 are of an opposite sign; and sizing the first and second birefringent crystals to have physical path lengths L1 and L2 such that (Δn11L1+α1Δn10L1+Δn21L2+α2Δn20L2) is minimized.
- 17. The method as recited in claim 16, further comprising compensating for the phase retardance of the first and second birefringent crystals using two Babinet compensators adjacent to each other and to the second birefringent crystal.
- 18. The method as recited in claim 17, further comprising forming the two Babinet compensators into wedges, and sliding the two Babinet compensators with respect to each other in a direction perpendicular to the light beam to provide adjustable compensation for the phase retardance of the first and second birefringent crystals.
- 19. A method for optical interleaving, comprising:
receiving and reflecting an incident light beam and generating a second output signal using a first polarization beam splitter (PBS); reflecting the reflected incident light beam using a second PBS; receiving the incident light beam and the reflected incident light beam into a first surface of a birefringent crystal adjacent to the first and second PBSs, and reflecting the incident and reflected incident light beams using a second surface which acts as a front mirror in a direction perpendicular to the second surface; reflecting the incident and reflected incident light beams using a back mirror perpendicular to the front mirror and positioned a distance d from the front mirror and forming a spacer region between the front and back mirrors; coating the front mirror with two different anisotropic coatings such that the front and back mirrors and the spacer region form a dual Gires-Tournois Interferometer (GTI) for providing reflectivities needed for flat-top performance. reflecting the reflected incident light beams using first and second mirrors oriented in the plane of incidence through which the incident and reflected incident light beams will pass; and receiving the reflected incident light beams and generating a first output signal using a third PBS oriented in the plane of incidence through which the light beam will pass.
- 20. The method as recited in claim 19, wherein the front mirror reflectivities are about 4-6% and the back mirror reflectivity is about 30-50%.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
[0001] Embodiments of the present invention claim priority from U.S. provisional patent application Serial No. 60/311,674, entitled “Athermal Birefringent Optical Interleavers With Flat-Top Passbands,” filed Aug. 8, 2001, the contents of which is incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.
Provisional Applications (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
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60311674 |
Aug 2001 |
US |