Gas laser mode-locking using an external acoustooptic modulator with a potential application to passive ring gyroscopes
Abstract
The fundamental pulsation frequency of a mode-locked laser is shown to be multipliable by an integer through a change of the length of a secondary cavity formed by an acoustooptic modulator (AOM) and an external mirror. A He-Ne laser with an optical path length of 177.5 cm with an intermode frequency separation of 84.5 MHz was used, with the frequency monitored by a scanning Fabry-Perot interferometer. A mirror reflected the diffracted beam back on itself to expose the injected beam to a Doppler shift to produce a total shift at the intermode beat frequency. Mode-locking occurred when the reflecting mirror was set at a distance from the laser mirror equal to the length of the laser cavity. Smaller lengths of reflection also produced waveforms equal to the mode-locked frequency. Using the beam folding technique to fabricate compact gyroscopes.
- Publication:
-
Applied Optics
- Pub Date:
- November 1982
- DOI:
- 10.1364/AO.21.003984
- Bibcode:
- 1982ApOpt..21.3984D
- Keywords:
-
- Acousto-Optics;
- Gas Lasers;
- Gyroscopes;
- Laser Mode Locking;
- Laser Applications;
- Laser Cavities;
- Modulators;
- Waveforms;
- Lasers and Masers;
- ACOUSTOOPTICS;
- GYROSCOPES;
- MODULATORS;
- MODES