Claims
- 1. A method for tuning a laser, comprising the steps of:
positioning a gas cell containing gas with individual vibrational-rotation line spectra inside a tunable laser cavity having a resonance wavelength; and employing a coarse wavelength tuning means to position the cavity resonance wavelength between adjacent absorption lines of said gas; whereby said laser operates at an absorption minimum that occurs between said absorption lines; whereby the laser wavelength is locked to an absolute wavelength defined by the gas; whereby maximum absorption bands in said gas act as filters for laser wavelength output; and whereby said laser does not require means for fine wavelength tuning.
- 2. The method of claim 1, further comprising the step of using an external tuning means to tune the laser to within a few nanometers of the minimum absorption wavelength so that it lases at the minimum spectral absorption lines where said laser cavity has maximum gain.
- 3. A method for tuning a laser that does not require means for fine wavelength tuning, comprising the steps of:
positioning a gas cell containing gas with individual vibrational-rotation line spectra outside a tunable laser cavity having a resonance wavelength; and positioning the cavity resonance wavelength between adjacent absorption lines of said gas; whereby said laser operates at an absorption minimum that occurs between said absorption lines; and whereby the laser wavelength is locked to an absolute wavelength defined by the gas.
- 4. The method of claim 3, wherein the step of positioning the cavity resonance wavelength between adjacent absorption lines of said gas includes using coarse wavelength tuning means.
- 5. The method of claim 4, further comprising the step of using an external tuning means to tune the laser to within a few nanometers of the minimum absorption wavelength so that it lases at the minimum spectral absorption lines where said laser cavity has maximum gain.
- 6. A method for providing channel isolation at a receiver means in an open-path communication system, comprising the steps of:
providing a gas cell having gases therein selected from the group of gases including atmospheric gases and non-atmospheric gases, said gases having absorption lines; providing a detector means in said receiver; positioning said gas cell in said receiver upstream of said detector; whereby unwanted light is pre-filtered; whereby absorption lines in said gas provide wavelength control for laser wavelength and for the optical bandwidth of the receiver; whereby channel isolation is provided at the receiver; and whereby individual wavelength channels are formed between the absorption lines of said gases so that each channel is blocked by said absorption lines from its adjacent channel.
- 7. The method of claim 6, further comprising the steps of:
providing said detector means in the form of a first and a second detector; positioning a beam splitter between said gas cell and said beam splitter; setting detector wavelengths for said first and second detectors to discrete wavelengths as defined by the gas in said gas cell; whereby moderate bandwidth optical filters are used at a detector site because unwanted wavelengths are filtered out by the absorption characteristics of the gas in the gas cell.
- 8. The method of claim 7, further comprising the steps of:
positioning a first moderate bandwidth optical filter between said beam splitter and said first detector and positioning a second moderate bandwidth optical filter between said beam splitter and said second detector.
- 9. A method for providing channel isolation at a receiver means in an open-path communication system, comprising the steps of:
positioning a laser cavity resonance wavelength substantially mid-way between adjacent absorption lines of a preselected atmospheric gas; providing a detector means in said receiver; whereby absorption lines in said preselected atmospheric gas provide wavelength control for laser wavelength and for the optical bandwidth of the receiver; and whereby channel isolation is provided at the receiver.
- 10. The method of claim 9, further comprising the steps of:
providing said detector means in the form of a first and a second detector; positioning a beam splitter between said gas cell and said beam splitter; setting detector wavelengths for said first and second detectors to discrete wavelengths as defined by the preselected atmospheric gas; whereby moderate bandwidth optical filters are used at a detector site because unwanted wavelengths are filtered out by the absorption characteristics of the preselected atmospheric gas.
- 11. The method of claim 10, further comprising the steps of:
positioning a first moderate bandwidth optical filter between said beam splitter and said first detector and positioning a second moderate bandwidth optical filter between said beam splitter and said second detector; tuning a laser source to within a few nanometers of the minimum absorption wavelength so that it lases at the minimum spectral absorption lines where said laser cavity has maximum gain.
- 12. A method for preventing cross-talk between adjacent wavelength channels, comprising the steps of:
controlling a wavelength-controlled laser to the optical bandwidth of a receiver means in an open-path communication system by tuning the laser so that it lases at minimum absorption wavelengths positioned between strong rotational-vibrational spectral absorption lines in atmospheric gases; said strong absorption lines providing optical guard channels that prevent the cross-talk; whereby an absorption line minimum locks the laser to the minimum absorption position and reliance upon optical bandwidth filters in a receiver channel is reduced.
- 13. A method for preventing cross-talk between adjacent wavelength channels, comprising the steps of:
providing a gas cell having atmospheric gases with strong absorption lines therein; positioning said gas cell in a receiver upstream of a detector; said strong absorption lines providing optical guard channels that prevent the cross-talk; whereby an absorption line minimum locks the laser to the minimum absorption position; and whereby reliance upon optical bandwidth filters in a receiver channel is reduced.
RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] The present application is a U.S. National Stage application claiming the benefit of prior filed International Application, Serial Number PCT/US02/02865, filed Jan. 30, 2002, which International Application claims a priority date of Jan. 30, 2001 based on prior filed U.S. Provisional Application Serial No. 60/265,022.
Provisional Applications (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
|
60265022 |
Jan 2001 |
US |
Continuation in Parts (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
| Parent |
PCT/US02/02865 |
Jan 2002 |
US |
| Child |
10604193 |
Jun 2003 |
US |