OEwaves lock and Finesse measurement, posted by Ronic Chiche at Optical room about lasers and optics
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this morning, I locked the FP cavity with the OEwaves CW laser and the "Fred fiber amplifier" used at 500mA of pump current.
the lock was much more easy than with the Koheras.
I had to change the 10GHz EOM which seems damaged as the modulation depth is very low and does not allow a Finesse measurement by modulation technique.
I changed it by a recently buyed 2GHz EOM... the modulation depth is large enough and we can make the Finesse measurement.
I took several sets of data and the average Finesse is 25.5k ! |
OEwaves CW Laser - Phase Noise , posted by Manar Amer at Optical room about lasers and optics | detectors and electronics  
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- We started measuring the phase noise on the OEwaves CW laser.
- Class 3b
- wavelength 1.5 um
- The procedure is done using self coupling of the laser
- splitter 50%-50%\
- delay line 100 m
- all fibers are PM type (polarity maintained)
- Photodetector is "lab buddy", very fast diode.
- Note: différance from schematic (we did not use a low pass filter)
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OEwaves CW Laser - Phase Noise , posted by Manar Amer at Optical room about lasers and optics | detectors and electronics
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a correction on the wavelength of the laser it is 1030 um
| Manar Amer wrote: |
- We started measuring the phase noise on the OEwaves CW laser.
- Class 3b
- wavelength 1.5 um
- The procedure is done using self coupling of the laser
- splitter 50%-50%\
- delay line 100 m
- all fibers are PM type (polarity maintained)
- Photodetector is "lab buddy", very fast diode.
- Note: différance from schematic (we did not use a low pass filter)
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OEwaves CW Laser - Phase Noise , posted by Manar Amer at Optical room about lasers and optics | detectors and electronics
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correction on unit 1030 nm
| Manar Amer wrote: |
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a correction on the wavelength of the laser it is 1030 um
| Manar Amer wrote: |
- We started measuring the phase noise on the OEwaves CW laser.
- Class 3b
- wavelength 1.5 um
- The procedure is done using self coupling of the laser
- splitter 50%-50%\
- delay line 100 m
- all fibers are PM type (polarity maintained)
- Photodetector is "lab buddy", very fast diode.
- Note: différance from schematic (we did not use a low pass filter)
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New mirrors batch informations, posted by Ronic Chiche at ThomX igloo about lasers and optics  
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the 2 files describe the specfications for the 16 mirrors ordered (4 for ThomX + spare, 4 for SBOX + spare) and the measurements made by the LMA.
I add also a 3rd file in which all the "special' mirrors are referenced. |
Mounts installation and cavity alignment, posted by Xinyi Lu at Optical room about lasers and optics
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Over the last two days, Viktor, Ronic and I have started to install the mirror mounts and try to align the cavity.
- We used the Menhir laser @ 160MHz for alignment.
- To make it easier to operate, we removed some lenses and waveplates, and kept only a few necessary reflective mirrors.
- We measured the distance with rulers and placed the mounts in designed positions.
- We installed Iris on the mirror mounts, used a CCD camera to determine if the beam was in the center, and optimized the two reflective mirrors outside the cavity.
- There were some problems with the controller of the injection mirrors (Newport™) in front of the cavity, and Ronic has fixed them successfully.
- Next week, we will continue to align the cavity, measure the cavity mode, and design the telescope. We will install the old SBX mirrors for alignment first, and then replace them with the final good mirrors. |
Mounts installation and cavity alignment, posted by Xinyi Lu at Optical room about lasers and optics 
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Over the past few days, Viktor, Ronic and I have continued to align the cavity. We installed 4 mirrors and monitored the transmitted laser with a CCD and photodiode. By adjusting the motors of the cavity mirror stages and the injector mirrors, we obtained resonances and less symmetric TEM20-like patterns. Possible reasons for this are a mismatch between the beam sizes of the laser and the cavity mode, and the mounts are installed in rough positions.
Tomorrow, we plan to use the CW laser to realign the optical cavity and position the mounts more precisely.
| Xinyi Lu wrote: |
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Over the last two days, Viktor, Ronic and I have started to install the mirror mounts and try to align the cavity.
- We used the Menhir laser @ 160MHz for alignment.
- To make it easier to operate, we removed some lenses and waveplates, and kept only a few necessary reflective mirrors.
- We measured the distance with rulers and placed the mounts in designed positions.
- We installed Iris on the mirror mounts, used a CCD camera to determine if the beam was in the center, and optimized the two reflective mirrors outside the cavity.
- There were some problems with the controller of the injection mirrors (Newport™) in front of the cavity, and Ronic has fixed them successfully.
- Next week, we will continue to align the cavity, measure the cavity mode, and design the telescope. We will install the old SBX mirrors for alignment first, and then replace them with the final good mirrors.
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Mounts installation and cavity alignment, posted by Xinyi Lu at Optical room about lasers and optics  
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- Over the last few days, Viktor, Ronic and I have reinstalled the mounts and realigned the cavity with CW laser and old mirrors. By optimizing the injector mirrors, we got the fundamental mode at the transmission. We measured the beam size in the M2 window with a diameter of 2.5 mm.
- The current coupling efficiency is low. There is a need to increase the coupling in order to lock the cavity and measure FSR and finesse.
- The next step is to measure the incident light parameters and design the telescope to improve the coupling efficiency.
| Xinyi Lu wrote: |
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Over the past few days, Viktor, Ronic and I have continued to align the cavity. We installed 4 mirrors and monitored the transmitted laser with a CCD and photodiode. By adjusting the motors of the cavity mirror stages and the injector mirrors, we obtained resonances and less symmetric TEM20-like patterns. Possible reasons for this are a mismatch between the beam sizes of the laser and the cavity mode, and the mounts are installed in rough positions.
Tomorrow, we plan to use the CW laser to realign the optical cavity and position the mounts more precisely.
| Xinyi Lu wrote: |
|
Over the last two days, Viktor, Ronic and I have started to install the mirror mounts and try to align the cavity.
- We used the Menhir laser @ 160MHz for alignment.
- To make it easier to operate, we removed some lenses and waveplates, and kept only a few necessary reflective mirrors.
- We measured the distance with rulers and placed the mounts in designed positions.
- We installed Iris on the mirror mounts, used a CCD camera to determine if the beam was in the center, and optimized the two reflective mirrors outside the cavity.
- There were some problems with the controller of the injection mirrors (Newport™) in front of the cavity, and Ronic has fixed them successfully.
- Next week, we will continue to align the cavity, measure the cavity mode, and design the telescope. We will install the old SBX mirrors for alignment first, and then replace them with the final good mirrors.
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Motors for D-shaped mirrors, posted by Loïc Amoudry at Optical room about mechanics | lasers and optics    
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Motors have been installed on 16/10/18. No problem with them.
Effect of the motors tested on 17/10/18. No improvement. But they give the possibility to perfectly cut HOM or let them go through as show the following picture of a 2.2 mode at ~340 mW in trans and 70% coupling @4A. |
Mirrors features, come back from LMA, posted by Loïc Amoudry at Optical room about lasers and optics  
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Mirrors arrived today from LMA. Their features are damaged.
Photos avant ou après nettoyage, pas clair dans le mail de Laurent :
"J'ai commencé à nettoyer M1 et M2 avec notr methode habituelle et je me suis aperçu que sur la partie centrale (en gros taille de ton faisceau j'ai l'impression) que des choses apparaissaient (voir photo)
Si bien que la diffusion n'a pas évolué dans le bon sens (diminution) voir empiré pour M1. J'ai donc arrêter de les nettoyer !!!
J'ai regardé les faces arrières des miroirs avant nettoyage et j'ai pu voir ce que tu vois sur la photo même au centre. Je sais pas de quoi cela peut venir.
Une chose est sûre le coating IBS a été altéré par je ne sais quoi dans ta manip provoquant cette dégradation dès qu'on y touche. L'interaction avec les faisceaux d'eélectrons n'avait jamais altéré les miroirs sur l'expértience DESY par exemple!!
Pour me rassurer, j'ai pris un miroir fait sur un micropoli qu'on a en stock et aucun pb lors du nettoyage (on peut penser à tout)"
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Mirrors cleaning, posted by Loïc Amoudry at Optical room about lasers and optics
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The new mirrors didn't give expected results. Then the 4 old mirrors have been sent to LMA on 12/11/18 for a cleaning and caracterization before and after cleaning. Also asked for a diffusion/absorption map on the mirrors if possible. They didn't really answered on what will they do.
Received on 13/11/18 by LMA. |
Mirror's installed, posted by Loïc Amoudry at Optical room about lasers and optics
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The initial 400kW SBOX mirrors which have been cleaned ont 28th of november have been installed this morning on the SBOX. |
Mirror's cleaning and microscope imaging, posted by Loïc Amoudry at Optical room about lasers and optics 14x
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On 10th of december 2020 we cleaned the SBOX mirrors and took microscope images (the name of the images indicates what they are).
There are 7 mirror, the initial M1 (spot in the center), M2 (spot on the edge), M3 and M4 which made the 200-400kW and the M2, M3 and M4 SPARE. The difference we make between M3 and M4 SPARE is the number on the box (11 or 13).
We used 3 different cleaning methods : 1st, one spin coater on HR, 2nd one, tissu wipe on AR (wipe with the optical tissu and isoprop) or 3rd one, mirror wiped on tissue (put isoprop on tissu and press AR face of the mirror doing "8" shape 3 times).
The second method is far les efficient as a cleaning method. The image "M3_M4_spare_11_after_cleaning_back.tif " shows the traces let by it and removed by the 3rd method on image "M3_M4_spare_11_after_cleaning_back_second_time_on_tissu.tif".
We can also notice that the spin coater let some trace on the HR face, round shaped, see Image "M3_M4_spare_13_after_cleaning_back.tif". We can propose to use the third method with Acetone on HR face before using spin coater to remove oil or organic particles.
It also lets a trace on the AR face, this is why we clean the AR face with the 2nd method after cleaning it with the spin coater.
Note : The position of the mirrors in the microscope is always the same here. Meaning mirrors are directed so that the arrow (which shows the HR face and is placed on the side of the mirror) is placed on the top of the images. |
Mirror's cleaning, posted by Loïc Amoudry at Optical room about lasers and optics 
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XPS has been proceeded on the 400kW SBOX mirrors M3 and M4 (the initial cavity spherical mirrors) in frebruary 2019. Deposited a lot of particles on these mirrors.
All the mirrors received a Infrared spectroscopy the 12th of november 2019. Deposited glue on the non-reflective face (was used to hold them).
15th of november (2019): The four 400kW SBOX mirror's have been cleaned with aceton and isopropanol.
28th of november (2019): The four 400kW SBOX mirror's have been cleaned with spin coater.
Summary:
Aceton and isopropanol removed most of the particles and all the glue. But it let some traces on the mirror surface on all the mirrors (so there is some kind of grease on the surfaces).
Spin coater removes all the traces.
See pictures. On all the first images, we also see the dust which is on the non reflective face through the mirror. On M3 and M4 there is still the "glue" on the non reflective face on their frst images + refletive faces very dirty because of XPS. |
Mightylaser Amplifier , posted by Manar Amer at Optical room about lasers and optics | cabling
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Migthylaser amplifier has been moved from the SBox table to the PLIC table.
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Microscope and cleaning of SBOX mirrors, posted by Loïc Amoudry at Optical room about lasers and optics
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The mirrors went in the cavity the 28th of november (We did several power up to 30kW stored and only one to 40kW then the power went down to 2kW during the run).
Microscope study shows that mirrors get some dust during the handling [travel from microscope to SBOX --> installation --> in SBOX for +1month and power up --> travel to microscope].
Almost all of these dusts can be removed with cleaning.
There is only one important difference between 28th of november and today, a large spot on M1. |
Menhir pulsed laser locking, posted by Xinyi Lu at Optical room about lasers and optics  
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These days, Ronic, Daniele and I achieved stable cavity locking with the menhir pulsed laser.
- After vacuuming, the current cavity finesse is now about 23,000. The diameter of the cavity mode is w_x=2.2mm, w_y=2.7mm.
- We had to compensate for frequency drift by manually adjusting the cavity length to keep locking.
Now the problem is that CEP's compensation range is not enough. The laser CEP is drifting from day to day. We adjusted the CEP by tuning the pump current of the menhir laser, but the adjustment range was not enough.
- The laser pump current is varied in the locking state and the variation of repetition rate is recorded. The current range is 850mA to 950mA and the repetition rate changes by 24 Hz. The calculation process is shown in Figure 3.
- By calculation, the variation of CEP caused by the variation of laser current is only π/2, which we hope is 2π.
- For Gamma Factory, the target FSR is 40 MHz, so the 4-pulse stack provides 4 times CEP tuning range to meet the requirements. But for our experiment, it seems not enough now.
The next step is to evaluate the gap to the maximum gain and draw the curve of CEP. Then we will discuss solutions.
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Menhir pulsed laser locking, posted by Xinyi Lu at Optical room about lasers and optics 
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Here is a simulation of the relative FP-cavity gain vs the CEP for a Finesse of 23000 and taking into account the Menhir laser optical spectrum and several CVBG parameters.
I added the commented Matlab code to produce this plot.
| Xinyi Lu wrote: |
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These days, Ronic, Daniele and I achieved stable cavity locking with the menhir pulsed laser.
- After vacuuming, the current cavity finesse is now about 23,000. The diameter of the cavity mode is w_x=2.2mm, w_y=2.7mm.
- We had to compensate for frequency drift by manually adjusting the cavity length to keep locking.
Now the problem is that CEP's compensation range is not enough. The laser CEP is drifting from day to day. We adjusted the CEP by tuning the pump current of the menhir laser, but the adjustment range was not enough.
- The laser pump current is varied in the locking state and the variation of repetition rate is recorded. The current range is 850mA to 950mA and the repetition rate changes by 24 Hz. The calculation process is shown in Figure 3.
- By calculation, the variation of CEP caused by the variation of laser current is only π/2, which we hope is 2π.
- For Gamma Factory, the target FSR is 40 MHz, so the 4-pulse stack provides 4 times CEP tuning range to meet the requirements. But for our experiment, it seems not enough now.
The next step is to evaluate the gap to the maximum gain and draw the curve of CEP. Then we will discuss solutions.
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Menhir pulsed laser locking, posted by Xinyi Lu at Optical room about lasers and optics 
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Last week, Ronic and I focused on CEP measurements of the menhir laser.
- Measurements without Cavity Locking:
- Direct measurement of repetition rate (Frep) with a spectrum analyzer. Altering the laser pump current from 950mA to 850mA, Frep changed by +28Hz.
- Measurement of the variation of carrier-envelope frequency (Fceo) by beating with CW laser. Altering the laser pump current from 950mA to 850mA resulted in a beating frequency of n0*dFrep + dFceo = +/-2.4MHz, so dFceo ~ 50MHz.
- Measurement with Cavity Locking:
- Maintaining cavity locking, we changed the laser pump current and AOM frequency to record the transmitted power of 5 consecutive fundamental mode (TEM00) resonances.
- The pump currents were set to 850 mA, 900 mA and 950 mA, and the AOM frequency were set to 210 MHz and 250 MHz. We then plotted the measured transmission amplitude values against the theoretical gain curve (see Figure 1).
- By adjusting the CEP, we reach the top point on the curve, which is the maximum gain. At this point, the coupling frequency increases from 10% to 50% (see Figure 2).
- We observe that a 100mA change in pump current adjusts the CEP for pi/2, while changing the AOM frequency by +/-40MHz adjusts the CEP for pi. In summary, our CEP tuning range is about 3pi/2 (130 MHz) - not the full 2pi, but still probably giving us maximum gain.
- Next Steps:
- Investigate factors associated with changes in CEP, such as laser temperature or pressure.
- Discuss with Menhir the feasibility of expanding the laser pump current adjustment range (now limited to 100mA).
- Optimize AOM frequency and locking status, connect the amplifier.
| Xinyi Lu wrote: |
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Here is a simulation of the relative FP-cavity gain vs the CEP for a Finesse of 23000 and taking into account the Menhir laser optical spectrum and several CVBG parameters.
I added the commented Matlab code to produce this plot.
| Xinyi Lu wrote: |
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These days, Ronic, Daniele and I achieved stable cavity locking with the menhir pulsed laser.
- After vacuuming, the current cavity finesse is now about 23,000. The diameter of the cavity mode is w_x=2.2mm, w_y=2.7mm.
- We had to compensate for frequency drift by manually adjusting the cavity length to keep locking.
Now the problem is that CEP's compensation range is not enough. The laser CEP is drifting from day to day. We adjusted the CEP by tuning the pump current of the menhir laser, but the adjustment range was not enough.
- The laser pump current is varied in the locking state and the variation of repetition rate is recorded. The current range is 850mA to 950mA and the repetition rate changes by 24 Hz. The calculation process is shown in Figure 3.
- By calculation, the variation of CEP caused by the variation of laser current is only π/2, which we hope is 2π.
- For Gamma Factory, the target FSR is 40 MHz, so the 4-pulse stack provides 4 times CEP tuning range to meet the requirements. But for our experiment, it seems not enough now.
The next step is to evaluate the gap to the maximum gain and draw the curve of CEP. Then we will discuss solutions.
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Menhir pulsed laser locking, posted by Xinyi Lu at Optical room about lasers and optics
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here is the code to get this last curve
| Xinyi Lu wrote: |
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Last week, Ronic and I focused on CEP measurements of the menhir laser.
- Measurements without Cavity Locking:
- Direct measurement of repetition rate (Frep) with a spectrum analyzer. Altering the laser pump current from 950mA to 850mA, Frep changed by +28Hz.
- Measurement of the variation of carrier-envelope frequency (Fceo) by beating with CW laser. Altering the laser pump current from 950mA to 850mA resulted in a beating frequency of n0*dFrep + dFceo = +/-2.4MHz, so dFceo ~ 50MHz.
- Measurement with Cavity Locking:
- Maintaining cavity locking, we changed the laser pump current and AOM frequency to record the transmitted power of 5 consecutive fundamental mode (TEM00) resonances.
- The pump currents were set to 850 mA, 900 mA and 950 mA, and the AOM frequency were set to 210 MHz and 250 MHz. We then plotted the measured transmission amplitude values against the theoretical gain curve (see Figure 1).
- By adjusting the CEP, we reach the top point on the curve, which is the maximum gain. At this point, the coupling frequency increases from 10% to 50% (see Figure 2).
- We observe that a 100mA change in pump current adjusts the CEP for pi/2, while changing the AOM frequency by +/-40MHz adjusts the CEP for pi. In summary, our CEP tuning range is about 3pi/2 (130 MHz) - not the full 2pi, but still probably giving us maximum gain.
- Next Steps:
- Investigate factors associated with changes in CEP, such as laser temperature or pressure.
- Discuss with Menhir the feasibility of expanding the laser pump current adjustment range (now limited to 100mA).
- Optimize AOM frequency and locking status, connect the amplifier.
| Xinyi Lu wrote: |
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Here is a simulation of the relative FP-cavity gain vs the CEP for a Finesse of 23000 and taking into account the Menhir laser optical spectrum and several CVBG parameters.
I added the commented Matlab code to produce this plot.
| Xinyi Lu wrote: |
|
These days, Ronic, Daniele and I achieved stable cavity locking with the menhir pulsed laser.
- After vacuuming, the current cavity finesse is now about 23,000. The diameter of the cavity mode is w_x=2.2mm, w_y=2.7mm.
- We had to compensate for frequency drift by manually adjusting the cavity length to keep locking.
Now the problem is that CEP's compensation range is not enough. The laser CEP is drifting from day to day. We adjusted the CEP by tuning the pump current of the menhir laser, but the adjustment range was not enough.
- The laser pump current is varied in the locking state and the variation of repetition rate is recorded. The current range is 850mA to 950mA and the repetition rate changes by 24 Hz. The calculation process is shown in Figure 3.
- By calculation, the variation of CEP caused by the variation of laser current is only π/2, which we hope is 2π.
- For Gamma Factory, the target FSR is 40 MHz, so the 4-pulse stack provides 4 times CEP tuning range to meet the requirements. But for our experiment, it seems not enough now.
The next step is to evaluate the gap to the maximum gain and draw the curve of CEP. Then we will discuss solutions.
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