Claims
- 1. An up-conversion diode-pumped alkali laser (UC-DPAL), comprising:
a laser cavity formed by an input mirror and an output mirror, resonant at a wavelength λ03 or λ04 corresponding to wavelengths of the D1′ or D2′ transitions of an alkali atomic vapor; a gain medium within said resonant cavity, said gain medium comprising a mixture of one or more buffer gases and an alkali vapor whose D1′ or D2′ transition wavelengths match that of the said resonant laser cavity; and a first semiconductor diode pump laser (or laser array) emitting at a wavelength suitable for optically exciting said laser gain mixture at a wavelength of the first series D1 or D2 transitions of said alkali vapor; and a second semiconductor diode pump laser (or laser diode array) emitting at a wavelength suitable for further optically exciting alkali atoms excited by the first pump laser, to the n 2D3/2 (or similar) electronic level of the alkali atom, the two said pumps together producing a population inversion and laser emission at the wavelength of the second series D1′0 or D2′ transitions of said alkali vapor.
- 2. The alkali vapor laser set forth in claim 1, wherein the alkali vapor is selected from the group consisting of cesium (Cs), rubidium (Rb), potassium (K), sodium (Na) and lithium (Li).
- 3. The alkali vapor laser set forth in claim 1, wherein the buffer gases are selected from the group consisting of 1) the subgroup of rare gases (xenon, krypton, argon, neon, and helium) and/or 2) the subgroup of light molecular gases (hydrogen, methane, ethane, propane; and their deuterated analogues).
- 4. The alkali vapor laser of claim 1, wherein the said output mirror of said resonant cavity is partially transmitting at a wavelength λ03 or λ04 matching the wavelengths of the second series D1′ or D2′ transitions of the said alkali vapor, permitting out-coupling of laser radiation generated within said optically pumped alkali vapor laser at a wavelength of λ03 or λ04 wherein said output mirror is made substantially highly reflecting at a wavelength matching the wavelengths of the two said pump laser diodes.
- 5. The alkali vapor laser of claim 1, wherein said input mirror of said laser cavity is a dichroic mirror, substantially transmitting radiation at a wavelengths of said pump laser diodes or diode arrays, and substantially reflecting at a wavelength λ03 or λ04 matching the wavelengths of the second series D1′ or D2′ transitions of the said alkali vapor.
- 6. The alkali vapor laser of claim 1, wherein a thin-film polarizer plate optical element is employed to spatially overlap and combine the polarized radiation from the two said pump laser diodes, prior to directing the radiation of the combined pump beams into said gain medium cell.
- 7. The alkali vapor laser of claim 1, wherein the said alkali vapor is cesium and the buffer gases are helium and ethane.
- 8. The alkali vapor laser of claim 7, wherein the first semiconductor pump diode laser of claim 1 emits at a wavelength of either ˜852 nm or 895 nm, matching the wavelength of the first-series cesium D2 and D1 transition wavelengths, respectively, and wherein the second semiconductor pump diode laser of claim 1 emits at a wavelength of either ˜921 nm or 876 nm, whose laser active material is selected from the AlGaAs or InGaAsP semiconductor compound material systems
- 9. The alkali vapor laser system of claim 7, wherein the said laser cavity of claim 1 is resonant at a wavelength of either ˜455 nm or ˜459 nm, matching the wavelengths of the second series cesium D2′ and D1′ transitions, respectively.
- 10. The alkali vapor laser of claim 1, wherein the alkali vapor is rubidium and the buffer gases are helium and ethane.
- 11. The alkali vapor laser of claim 10, wherein the first semiconductor pump diode laser of claim 1 emits at a wavelength of either ˜780 nm or ˜795 nm, matching the wavelength of the first series rubidium D2 and D1 transition wavelengths, respectively, and wherein the second semiconductor pump diode laser of claim 1 emits at a wavelength of either ˜776 nm or 761 nm, whose laser active material is selected from the AlGaAs, AlGaAlP, or InGaAsP semiconductor compound material systems.
- 12. The alkali vapor laser system of claim 10, wherein the said laser cavity of claim 1 is resonant at a wavelength of ˜422 nm or 420 nm, matching the wavelengths of the second series rubidium D2′ and D1′ transitions, respectively.
- 13. A method for converting the substantially-divergent, multi-spatial-mode radiation of semiconductor diode laser pump arrays into a near diffraction-limited, near-single-spatial-mode, coherent laser radiation at a wavelength shorter than those of either pump, comprising the steps of:
depositing the radiation from said pump diodes in an alkali/buffer-gas gain mixture through a two step sequential absorption process, in a certain defined spatial volume (within the gain mixture cell placed in a laser cavity), and spatially over-lapping said volume with the fundamental mode of the alkali vapor laser cavity, designed to possess substantially higher losses for higher order spatial modes than for the fundamental mode; and extracting laser output power at the shorter wavelength in the fundamental spatial mode of the laser cavity by providing the proper amount of transmission of radiation at the output wavelength λ03 or λ04 matching the wavelengths of the D2′ and D1′ transitions of said alkali vapor.
- 14. A method for producing an up-conversion diode-pumped alkali laser (UC-DPAL), comprising:
forming a laser cavity with an input mirror and an output mirror, resonant at a wavelength λ03 or λ04 corresponding to wavelengths of the D1′ or D2′ transitions of an alkali atomic vapor; providing a gain medium within said resonant cavity, said gain medium comprising a mixture of one or more buffer gases and an alkali vapor whose D1′ or D2′ transition wavelengths match that of the said resonant laser cavity; providing a first semiconductor diode pump laser (or laser array) that can emit at a wavelength suitable for optically exciting said laser gain mixture at a wavelength of the first series D1 or D2 transitions of said alkali vapor; and providing a second semiconductor diode pump laser (or laser diode array) that can emit at a wavelength suitable for further optically exciting alkali atoms excited by the first pump laser, to the n 2D3/2 (or similar) electronic level of the alkali atom, the two said pumps together producing a population inversion and laser emission at the wavelength of the second series D1′ or D2′ transitions of said alkali vapor.
- 15. The method of claim 14, wherein the alkali vapor is selected from the group consisting of cesium (Cs), rubidium (Rb), potassium (K), sodium (Na) and lithium (Li).
- 16. The method of claim 14, wherein the buffer gases are selected from the group consisting of 1) the subgroup of rare gases (xenon, krypton, argon, neon, and helium) and/or 2) the subgroup of light molecular gases (hydrogen, methane, ethane, propane; and their deuterated analogues).
- 17. The method of claim 14, wherein the said output mirror of said resonant cavity is partially transmitting at a wavelength λ03 or λ04 matching the wavelengths of the second series D1′ or D2′ transitions of the said alkali vapor, permitting out-coupling of laser radiation generated within said optically pumped alkali vapor laser at a wavelength of λ03 or λ04, wherein said output mirror is made substantially highly reflecting at a wavelength matching the wavelengths of the two said pump laser diodes.
- 18. The method of claim 14, wherein said input mirror of said laser cavity is a dichroic mirror, substantially transmitting radiation at a wavelengths of said pump laser diodes or diode arrays, and substantially reflecting at a wavelength λ03 or λ04 matching the wavelengths of the second series D1′ or D2′ transitions of the said alkali vapor.
- 19. The method of claim 14, wherein a thin-film polarizer plate optical element is employed to spatially overlap and combine the polarized radiation from the two said pump laser diodes, prior to directing the radiation of the combined pump beams into said gain medium cell.
- 20. The method of claim 14, wherein the said alkali vapor is cesium and the buffer gases are helium and ethane.
- 21. The method of claim 20, wherein the first semiconductor pump diode laser of claim 1 emits at a wavelength of either ˜852 nm or 895 nm, matching the wavelength of the first-series cesium D2 and D1 transition wavelengths, respectively, and wherein the second semiconductor pump diode laser of claim 1 emits at a wavelength of either ˜921 nm or 876 nm, whose laser active material is selected from the AlGaAs or InGaAsP semiconductor compound material systems
- 22. The method of claim 20, wherein the said laser cavity is resonant at a wavelength of either ˜455 nm or ˜459 nm, matching the wavelengths of the second series cesium D2′ and D1′ transitions, respectively.
- 23. The method of claim 14, wherein the alkali vapor is rubidium and the buffer gases are helium and ethane.
- 24. The method of claim 23, wherein the first semiconductor pump diode laser of claim 1 emits at a wavelength of either ˜780 nm or ˜795 nm, matching the wavelength of the first series rubidium D2 and D1 transition wavelengths, respectively, and wherein the second semiconductor pump diode laser of claim 1 emits at a wavelength of either ˜776 nm or 761 mm, whose laser active material is selected from the AlGaAs, AlGaAlP, or InGaAsP semiconductor compound material systems.
- 25. The method of claim 23, wherein the said laser cavity of claim 1 is resonant at a wavelength of ˜422 nm or 420 nm, matching the wavelengths of the second series rubidium D2′ and D1′ transitions, respectively.
Parent Case Info
[0001] This is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/000,508, titled “Diode-Pumped Alkali Laser” filed Oct. 23, 2001 and incorporated herein by reference.
Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
10000508 |
Oct 2001 |
US |
Child |
10024127 |
Dec 2001 |
US |