Claims
- 1. A vertical external cavity surface emitting laser formed by an optical resonator, the laser comprising:
a) an amplifying mirror comprising: a multi-layer Bragg reflector having at least 90 percent reflectance, and a homogeneously broadened active gain wavelength region comprising multiple quantum wells positioned on top of the Bragg reflector; b) an external mirror confronting the gain region along an optical axis of the resonator; and c) spacer means for positioning and supporting the external mirror relative to the amplifying mirror at a distance selected to provide discrete tunability by setting an optical path length for the optical resonator.
- 2. The laser of claim 1, wherein said external mirror has a concave face confronting said amplifying mirror.
- 3. The laser of claim 1, wherein said Bragg reflector comprises at least two epitaxially deposited semiconductor layers.
- 4. The laser of claim 1, wherein said Bragg reflector comprises at least two dielectric layers.
- 5. The laser of claim 1 wherein said amplifying mirror further comprises an antireflection region positioned on top of said gain region.
- 6. The laser of claim 1, wherein said quantum wells are positioned as plural pairs of quantum wells, each pair having an associated gain wavelength located at or near a standing wave peak of a laser longitudinal cavity mode present within said gain wavelength region.
- 7. The laser of claim 1, wherein said gain region is optically pumped.
- 8. The laser of claim 6, wherein a beam emitted from the optical pump impinges on said amplifying mirror at an angle corresponding to Brewster's angle, whereby an amplitude of a reflection of said beam from said amplifying mirror is minimized.
- 9. The laser of claim 8, wherein said pump radiation absorption means is positioned to absorb substantially all of said portion of said beam which is reflected from said amplifying mirror.
- 10. The laser of claim 1, wherein said Bragg reflector is bonded to a heat sink.
- 11. The laser of claim 10, wherein a metal layer is positioned between said heat sink and said Bragg reflector, whereby a combined reflectivity of said Bragg reflector and said metal layer is increased.
- 12. The laser of claim 10, wherein a thermo-electric heating/cooling element is in thermal contact with said heat sink, said thermo-electric element having a control input to alter a heat sink temperature, whereby the emission wavelength of said laser is tunable.
- 13. The laser of claim 10, wherein said heat sink is bonded to a piezo-electric element such that said heat sink is between the piezo-electic element and said Bragg reflector, the piezo-electric element having a control input to alter said optical path length of said optical resonator, thereby tuning a laser emission wavelength.
- 14. A stepwise tunable external cavity laser formed by an optical resonator having a gain wavelength band, the laser comprising:
a) an amplifying mirror forming a first end of said optical resonator; b) an external mirror forming a second end of said optical resonator positioned such that an optical path length of said optical resonator provides discrete tunability; and c) an electronically-actuated, frequency selective element within said optical resonator, wherein the frequency-selective element has a control input to select an emission wavelength of a beam emitted by the laser.
- 15. The laser of claim 14, wherein said amplifying mirror is an epitaxially grown monolithic semiconductor structure having a surface emitting gain-portion, the gain portion including a plurality of active layers spaced apart by spacer layers arranged to provide optical gain and overlying a reflector portion comprising multiple layers of materials having at least two different indices of refraction sufficient to produce reflectivity at said gain wavelength band greater than 95 percent.
- 16. The laser of claim 14, wherein said amplifying mirror is excited to produce gain by means of radiation focused onto a region of said amplifying mirror.
- 17. The laser of claim 14, wherein said amplifying mirror is excited to produce gain by an electrical current.
- 18. The laser of claim 14, wherein said amplifying mirror is attached to heat-sink means so that a temperature of said laser can be controlled.
- 19. The laser of claim 14, wherein said external mirror has a concave surface, with a radius of curvature that maintains a single transverse mode of oscillation over a range of optical pumping power, and is coated with a plurality of layers of dielectric materials having at least twodifferent indices of refraction sufficient to produce a reflectivity greater than 95 percent over said entire gain wavelength band of said amplifying mirror.
- 20. The laser of claim 14, wherein said external mirror is planar, further comprising a focusing element positioned inside said optical resonator so that said optical resonator is centered within a resonator stability range.
- 21. The laser of claim 14, wherein said optical resonator additionally comprises beam forming optics to reduce angular divergence of said beam as said beam enters said frequency selective element.
- 22. The laser of claim 21, wherein said beam forming optics comprises a lens.
- 23. The laser of claim 21, wherein said beam forming optics comprises a concave mirror with a multi-layer dielectric coating.
- 24. The laser of claim 21, wherein said beam forming optics comprises an off-axis parabolic mirror.
- 25. The laser of claim 14, wherein said frequency-selective element comprises an intracavity etalon with electronically-actuated control means to alter an angle the etalon makes with respect to an intracavity laser beam, whereby an emission wavelength of said laser is tunable.
- 26. The laser of claim 14, wherein said frequency-selective element comprises a monolithic planar air-spaced etalon with at least one free-standing dielectric film as a mirror and an etalon length that allows at most one transmission maximum frequency to lie within said gain wavelength band of said amplifying mirror, said transmission maximum frequency being tunable by application of a variable voltage to said mirror to alter a length of the etalon length.
- 27. The laser of claim 14, wherein said frequency-selective element comprises a planar etalon including a spacer medium comprising an electro-optically active material and an etalon length which allows at most one transmission maximum frequency to lie within said gain wavelength band of said amplifying mirror, where the transmission maximum frequency is tunable by the application of a variable voltage to said spacer medium.
- 28. The laser of claim 27, wherein said spacer medium comprises a nematic or smectic liquid crystal.
- 29. The laser of claim 14, wherein said frequency selective element comprises:
a) a polarization selective element; b) a birefringent electro-optical medium with ordinary and extraordinary axes each oriented at substantially ±45° with respect to the high transmission axis of said polarization selective element; and c) means for applying a selection voltage to the electro-optical medium, and for varying said selection voltage over a range of values that accesses said entire gain wavelength band of said amplifying mirror.
- 30. The laser of claim 14, wherein said frequency selective element comprises:
a) a polarization selective element; b) a first birefringent electro-optical medium with ordinary and extraordinary axes oriented at substantially ±45° with respect to the high transmission axis of thepolarization selective element; c) a second birefringent electro-optical medium with ordinary and extraordinary axes oriented so that the extraordinary axis of the second electro-optic medium is substantially aligned with the ordinary axis of the first electro-optic medium, and the ordinary axis of the second electro-optic medium is substantially aligned with the extraordinary axis of the first electro-optic medium; and d) means for applying a first selection voltage to the first electro-optical medium and for applying a second selection voltage to the second electro-optical medium, and for varying at least one of the first and second selection voltages over a range of values that spans said entire gain wavelength band said amplifying mirror, whereby a total length of electro-optic media in said laser can be increased without reducing a laser tuning range, thereby allowing use of at least one of a reduced first selection voltage and a reduced second selection voltage.
- 31. The laser of claim 14, wherein said frequency selective element comprises:
a) a polarization selective element; b) a first birefringent electro-optical medium with ordinary and extraordinary axes oriented at substantially ±45° with respect to a high transmission axis of the polarization selective element; c) a second birefringent electro-optical medium with ordinary and extraordinary axes oriented such that the extraordinary axis of the second electro-optic medium is substantially aligned with the extraordinary axis of the first electro-optic medium, and the ordinary axis of the second electro-optic medium is substantially aligned with the ordinary axis of the first electro-optic medium; d) a half wave plate positioned between the first electro-optic medium and the second electro-optic medium, oriented such that light polarized along an ordinary axis of the electro-optical media is substantially converted to light polarized along an extraordinary axis of the electro-optical media, and light polarized along an extraordinary axis of the electro-optical media is substantially converted to light polarized along an ordinary axis of electro-optical media, in transmission through the half wave plate; and e) means for applying a first selection voltage to the first electro-optical medium and for applying a second selection voltage to the second electro-optical medium, and for varying at least one of the first and second selection voltages over a range of values that spans said entire gain wavelength band of said amplifying mirror, whereby an angular bandwidth of said frequency selective element is enhanced, and a total length of the electro-optic media in said laser can be increased without reducing a laser tuning range, thereby allowing use of at least one of a reduced first selection voltage and a reduced second selection voltage.
- 32. The laser of claim 14, wherein said frequency selective element comprises:
a) a polarization selective element, b) a birefringent medium with ordinary and extraordinary axes oriented at substantially ±45° with respect to a high transmission axis of said polarization selective element, c) a birefringent electro-optical medium with ordinary and extraordinary axes oriented at substantially ±45° with respect to the high transmission axis of said polarization selective element, and d) means for applying a selection voltage to said electro-optical medium and for varying the selection voltage over a range of values that spans said entire gain wavelength band of said amplifying mirror,
- 33. The laser of claim 32, wherein said electro-optic medium is a nematic or smectic liquid crystal.
- 34. A method for generating a discretely tunable laser beam comprising the steps of:
a) pumping a gain medium positioned within an optical resonator; b) positioning a tuning element within the optical resonator, where said tuning element has a control input to select an emission wavelength of the laser; and c) providing an optical path length for the optical resonator to provide discrete tunability of the emission wavelength, so that varying the control input to the tuning element causes the emission to assume a value which lies on a predetermined frequency grid.
- 35. The method set forth in claim 34, wherein said predetermined frequency grid comprises a predetermined optical telecommunications frequency grid having substantially equally spaced optical channels.
- 36. A method for generating a discretely tunable laser beam comprising the steps of:
a) pumping a gain medium positioned within an optical resonator; b) positioning a tuning element within the optical resonator, where the tuning element has a control input to select an emission wavelength of the laser; and c) positioning a grid-fixing etalon within the optical resonator to provide discrete tunability of the emission wavelength, so that varying the control input to the tuning element causes the emission wavelength to assume a value which lies on a predetermined frequency grid.
- 37. The method set forth in claim 36, wherein said predetermined frequency grid comprises a predetermined optical telecommunications frequency grid having substantially equally spaced optical channels.
REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] The present application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/738,277 filed Dec. 13, 2000, and is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/930,841, filed on Aug. 15, 2001, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/668,905, filed on Sep. 22, 2000.
Divisions (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
| Parent |
10104347 |
Mar 2002 |
US |
| Child |
10770784 |
Feb 2004 |
US |
Continuation in Parts (3)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
| Parent |
09738277 |
Dec 2000 |
US |
| Child |
10770784 |
Feb 2004 |
US |
| Parent |
09930841 |
Aug 2001 |
US |
| Child |
10104347 |
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US |
| Parent |
09668905 |
Sep 2000 |
US |
| Child |
09930841 |
Aug 2001 |
US |