We have experimentally demonstrated coherent combining of 2 and then 4 fiber lasers, with respectively 99% and 95% combining efficiency. The combining method investigated here is based on a multi-arm resonator of interferometric configuration. In spite of its interferometric nature, the multi-arm laser operates without significant power fluctuations, even in an unprotected environment. This occurs when the arm length difference is large enough to introduce spectral modulations of period smaller than the laser bandwidth. We have also experimentally shown that the combining method is compatible with wavelength tuning. A Mach- Zehnder Fiber Laser was tuned over a wide spectral range of 60nm. Theoretically then, we confirm that the combining method can be scaled to a large number of lasers without decreasing the combining efficiency.
We experimentally demonstrate that Kerr spatial self-cleaning of a pulsed beam can be obtained in an amplifying multimode optical fiber. An input peak power of 500 W only was sufficient to produce a quasi-single-mode emission from the double-clad ytterbium doped multimode fiber (YMMF) with non-parabolic refractive index profile. We compare the self-cleaning behavior observed in the same fiber with loss and with gain. Laser gain introduces new opportunities to achieve spatial self-cleaning of light in multimode fibers at a relatively low power threshold.
Propagation of light in multimode optical fibers usually gives a spatial and temporal randomization of the transmitted field similar to the propagation through scattering media. Randomization still applies when scattering or multimode propagation occurs in gain media. We demonstrate that appropriate structuration of the input beam wavefront can shape the light amplified by a rare-earth-doped multimode fiber. Profiling of the wavefront was achieved by a deformable mirror in combination with an iterative optimization process. We present experimental results and simulations showing the shaping of a single sharp spot at different places in the output cross-section of an ytterbium-doped fiber amplifier. Cleaning and narrowing of the amplifier far-field pattern was realized as well. Tailoring the wavefront to shape the amplified light can also serve to improve the effective gain. The shaping approach still works under gain saturation, showing the robustness of the method. Modeling and experiments attest that the shaping is effective even with a highly multimode fiber amplifier carrying up to 127 modes.
We report the experimental observation of Kerr beam self-cleaning in a graded-index multimode fiber, leading to output beam profiles different from a bell shape, close to the LP01 mode. For specific coupling conditions, nonlinear coupling among the guided modes can reshape the output speckle pattern generated by a pulsed beam into the low order LP11 mode. This was observed in a few meters long multimode fiber with 750 ps pulses at 1064 nm in the normal dispersion regime. The power threshold for LP11 mode self-cleaning was about three times larger than that required for Kerr nonlinear selfcleaning into the LP01 mode.Multimode optical fibers (MMFs) are currently extensively revisited for communication applications, and because they provide a convenient experimental platform for the investigation of complex space-time nonlinear dynamics. Various nonlinear propagation phenomena have been theoretically predicted to occur in multimode fibers since the eighties [1-5], but it is not until recently that some of them were actually observed. Consider, for instance, multimode optical solitons [6] and geometric parametric instability (GPI) [7]. On the other hand, experiments on nonlinear propagation in multimode fibers have recently revealed an unexpected effect that was named Kerr beam self-cleaning. It consists in the reshaping, at high powers, of the speckled output intensity pattern into a bell-shaped beam close to the fundamental LP01 mode of a graded index (GRIN) MMF. Such nonlinear beam evolution was observed at power levels below the threshold for frequency conversion, as well as below the self-focusing threshold, with subnanosecond to femtosecond pulses propagating in the normal dispersion regime [7][8][9][10]. It is generally admitted today that Kerr self-cleaning results from a complex nonlinear coupling, or fourwave mixing (FWM) interaction among a large population of guided modes. Namely, the combination of spatial self-induced periodic imaging and Kerr nonlinearity creates a periodic longitudinal modulation of the refractive index of the fiber core. This permits quasi-phase matching and energy exchange between guided modes by means of FWM [11]. The nonlinear energy exchange between the fundamental mode and the high-order modes (HOMs) exhibits a nonreciprocal behavior, driven by self-phase modulation [8,12]. In these conditions, all the energy transferred in the fundamental mode remains definitively trapped, which explains the robust nature of the self-cleaning process. Besides that model, alternative concepts based on instability of the HOMs [10], or on modified wave turbulence theory [4] have been introduced, which could also explain the unconventional spatial dynamics observed in MMFs.In this Letter, we report the experimental demonstration of Kerr beam self-cleaning in favor of the LP11 mode of a gradient index (GRIN) MMF. This is quite unexpected, since all previous works on Kerr beam self-cleaning, based on either numerical investigations or experiments, reported self-cleaning of the output field into a smo...
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