The invention relates to an ultra-broadband, low-cost Faraday rotator.
There is an increased need for broadband Faraday rotators, in particular in the field of femtosecond and sub-femtosecond lasers, which manipulate a broadband light source. Essentially the Faraday rotator is extremely wavelength dependent and therefore is usually available for a very limited wavelength range. Achromatic Faraday rotators are usually obtained through a complex and expensive combination of chromatic Faraday rotator and wave plates.
As opposed to the prior art, the present invention uses three components of Faraday rotation in a material: the magnetic field applied to the material, the Verdet constant of the material and the material length. In one embodiment of the invention, the system spatially disperses a light beam using a dispersive element, assigns a particular material length for each wavelength, and recombines the beam using another dispersive element.
There is provided in accordance with an embodiment of the invention an apparatus including a dispersive-collimating element, a Faraday material apparatus and a focusing-dispersive element such that the dispersive-collimating element assigns each beam wavelength to a particular spatial position, the beams being parallel one to the other, the Faraday material apparatus provides a polarization rotation independently for each wavelength, and the focusing-dispersive element recombines the wavelengths into one single beam.
In one aspect, the Faraday material apparatus includes a Faraday material with a non-zero Verdet coefficient located within a magnetic field so that each wavelength propagates for a different length within the Faraday material so as to generate a polarization rotation that is the same for all the wavelengths.
In one aspect, a shape of the Faraday material is complemented to a rectangular shape by a transparent material with a near-zero Verdet coefficient and index-matched to a refractive index of the Faraday material, so that beams exit in a direction that is parallel to the impinging beam.
In one aspect, a shape of the Faraday material is complemented to a rectangular shape by using a complemented part of the Faraday material, and distanced from the Faraday material by a transparent material with a near-zero Verdet coefficient and index-matched to a refractive index of the Faraday material, and the complemented part is located in a region where the magnetic field is approximately null.
In one aspect, in the dispersive-collimating element there are curved surfaces that are preceded, followed or both preceded and followed by spatially variable birefringent elements so that polarization is not distorted by interaction with the curved surfaces.
In one aspect, a length of the Faraday material is modified for each wavelength.
The Faraday effect can be described by the following relationship: θ=V(λ)Bd, where θ is the polarization rotation angle, λ is the light wavelength, V represents the wavelength dependent Verdet constant, B is the magnetic field and d is the path length of the light in the material.
Typically, the Verdet constant is related to the light wavelength with the following relation:
At the condition for which the rotation angle is constant, and equal to θ0, one obtains the following condition:
Bd=K(λ2−λ02)
In reference to
By cutting the Faraday material plate according to a parabolic shape 24, as shown in
The beam is then reformed using another achromatic cylindrical lens 27 and diffractive element 28.
Implementation 1: The Verdet Coefficient has a Different Functional Shape.
Using the same diffractive element-lens combination as in
Thus once the wavelength dependent Verdet constant is determined, the cutting of the Faraday material is determined directly.
Implementation 2: The Magnetic Field is not Homogeneous
If the magnetic field is not homogeneous, but its spatial dependence B(x,z) has been measured, then the propagation distance d as a function of x can be calculated as the solution of the following equation:
θ0=V(x,λ)∫0d(x)dzB(x,z)
Implementation 3: Phase Compensation
Since the different wavelengths of the beam light propagate in the Faraday material through different path-lengths, they necessarily accumulate different phase-shifts. This can be compensated for by filling the part that has been removed from the rectangular Faraday rotator material plate with a non-Faraday material with the same refractive index, as shown in
Implementation 4: Dispersion Compensation
The previous phase compensation scheme is not sufficient, for example, for femtosecond lasers, where the relative phases of each wavelength component of the pulse are critical.
Material 41 is the cut Faraday material (as in
Implementation 5: The Dispersive Element-Lens Subsystems (Elements 22-23 and 27-28) can be Replaced by a Double Prism Configuration
Implementation 6: Polarization Distortion at Surfaces
The dispersive elements 22 and 28 generate beams that propagate in different directions (each wavelength corresponds to a different direction). When these beams meet a surface, the beams polarization changes according to Fresnel law (for example if they meet a surface at Brewster angle, only one polarization component is kept). In order to reduce this distortive effect different solutions are provided:
Solution 1: Coating of the surface with a polarization independent antireflection layer (or multilayer) over a large numerical aperture (equal or larger than the beam numerical aperture).
Solution 2: As shown in
Solution 3: The distortion in the polarization is a second order effect. Therefore by maintaining a small enough angle all over the propagation length, this effect can be minimized.
The following table (P. Molina, V. Vasyliev, E. G. Vfflora, and K. Shimamura, Opt. Express 19, 11786 (2011)) provides the values of E and λ0 for several common Faraday materials. In these examples, TGG (terbium gallium garnet) is the material being considered.
In reference to
λ(x)≅c1x+c2
Assuming that the spectral range of 650-1100 nm is spread over L=3 cm (L is the dimension of 41 in the x direction):
Therefore, the Faraday material length as a function of the position x can be written:
Two different cases are examined: uniform magnetic flux (fixed at 0.5 Tesla) and linearly varying magnetic flux (between 0.2 to 0.5 Tesla) in the x dimension. The Faraday material length d(x) as a function of the position x is displayed in
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2019/058537 | 10/8/2019 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2020/075048 | 4/16/2020 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5712728 | Chen | Jan 1998 | A |
6532316 | Cao | Mar 2003 | B1 |
6563977 | Chen | May 2003 | B1 |
20010040723 | Kusaka | Nov 2001 | A1 |
20050036202 | Cohen | Feb 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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104635347 | May 2015 | CN |
106980156 | Jul 2017 | CN |
Entry |
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PCT Search Report and Written Opinion PCT/IB2019/058537, Mar. 9, 2020. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20210389611 A1 | Dec 2021 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62742945 | Oct 2018 | US |