Claims
- 1. A method of filtering an input optical signal, comprising:
providing a volume phase hologram; directing said input signal on said volume phase hologram at an input angle, said input angle being modified as a function of temperature whereby to compensate for an effect of temperature on said volume phase hologram; collecting light from said volume phase hologram.
- 2. A method as claimed in claim 1, wherein said volume phase hologram is fabricated from fused silica photosensitive glass.
- 3. A method as claimed in claim 1, wherein said providing comprises providing said volume phase hologram with a plurality of gratings.
- 4. A method as claimed in claim 3, further comprising displacing an entry point of said input signal on said volume phase hologram from one grating location of a first grating to another grating location of another grating without allowing said input signal to go through an intermediate grating, whereby to achieve hitless tuning.
- 5. A method as claimed in claim 1, wherein said providing comprises providing said volume phase hologram with a grating and wherein said directing comprises controlling said input signal to partially illuminate said grating, thereby tuning a power of said collected light.
- 6. A method as claimed in claim 5, further comprising displacing one of said volume phase hologram and said input optical device to control said illumination of said grating.
- 7. An athermal filter comprising:
a volume phase hologram; an input optical device for directing said input signal on said volume phase hologram at an input angle; an angle controller for modifying said input angle as a function of temperature whereby to compensate for an effect of temperature on said volume phase hologram; a collecting device for collecting light from said volume phase hologram.
- 8. An athermal filter as claimed in claim 7, wherein said input optical device comprises an input fiber, an input fiber holder and an input optical lens and wherein said angle controller is said input fiber holder.
- 9. An athermal filter as claimed in claim 7, wherein said collecting device comprises a through-traffic fiber, a through traffic fiber holder and a through traffic optical lens.
- 10. An athermal filter as claimed in claim 8, wherein said collecting device comprises an add/drop fiber, an add/drop fiber holder and an add/drop optical lens and wherein said input fiber holder is said add/drop fiber holder and said input optical lens is said add/drop optical lens, and wherein said angle controller is said input fiber holder.
- 11. An athermal filter as claimed in claim 7, wherein said angle controller is an optical device holder having a thermal expansion compensating the thermal shift of a wavelength response of said volume phase hologram.
- 12. An athermal filter as claimed in claim 7, wherein said volume phase hologram is written in fused silica photosensitive glass.
- 13. An athermal filter as claimed in claim 7, wherein said volume phase hologram is written in photorefractive crystal.
- 14. An athermal filter as claimed in claim 7, wherein said volume phase hologram is written in polymer material.
- 15. An athermal filter as claimed in claim 7, wherein said volume phase hologram is written in one of liquid crystal and polymer dispersed liquid crystal.
- 16. An athermal filter as claimed in claim 7, wherein said volume phase hologram is tuned by one of an electric field, a magnetic field, thermal means and acoustic means.
- 17. An athermal filter as claimed in claim 8, wherein said optical lens is one of a grin lens and a cylindrical lens.
- 18. An athermal filter as claimed in claim 8, wherein said optical lens is one of a plane mirror and a curved mirror.
- 19. An athermal filter as claimed in claim 7 wherein said optical input device is displaced with respect to said volume phase hologram to tune the intensity of the light collected.
- 20. An athermal filter as claimed in claim 7, further comprising an actuator to displace said volume phase hologram.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application claims priority on U.S. provisional patent application serial No. 60/371,174 filed on Apr. 9, 2002.
Provisional Applications (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
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60371174 |
Apr 2002 |
US |