Proceedings Article | 12 July 2023
KEYWORDS: Radiofrequency ablation, Adaptive optics, Fiber lasers, Laser guide stars, Stars, Raman spectroscopy, Satellites, Ytterbium, Astronomical imaging, Fiber amplifiers
While the next generation of satellite constellations provide improved capacity through the use of optical inter-satellite links, there is still a capacity bottleneck at the RF feeder links between satellites and ground stations, which are an order of magnitude slower in moving data. In order to move to all optical feeder links, there is a challenge to overcome the distortion associated with atmospheric turbulence. Laser Guide Star (LGS) adaptive optics systems are a key enabling technology to help solve this beam wander problem for ground to space optical systems. For guide star lasers suitable for daytime LGS operation, high power is key. To respond to this need, a 100-W continuous-wave (CW) 1178-nm narrow-band polarization-maintaining (PM) Raman fiber amplifier (RFA) has been developed and fully engineered. A linearly-polarized single-frequency 1178-nm seed laser with an output power of only a few mW is amplified up to 100 W in a two-stage RFA counter-pumped by a 200-W 1120-nm PM fiber laser. Techniques for efficient suppression of stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) have been optimized, resulting in the RFA SBS threshold being pushed beyond the 100-W level. The narrow linewidth of the seed laser is well preserved in the RFA, without any evidence of linewidth broadening up to 100 W. The RFA is based on true single-mode PM fibers and has excellent polarization purity and output beam quality, key factors for subsequent efficient frequency doubling to the Na absorption line at 589 nm in a resonant frequency-doubling cavity. Similar to the widely-deployed MPBC/TOPTICA SodiumStar 20/2, the new 100-W RFA system is a compact, modular, reliable and ruggedized off-the-shelf system ready for integration. Compared to solid-state alternatives, a guide star laser based on an all-fiber, highly-reliable, 100-W RFA not only provides excellent overall wall-plug efficiency due to its high pump-to-Raman optical conversion efficiency, but also maximizes the important “up time” for the optical channel at ground station facilities since it is a maintenance-free and turn-key system. To confirm the stability and reliability of this next-generation guide star RFA, the system was run 24/7 at the full 100 W for a total of 1300 hours. The test results confirmed that the 100-W RFA system is extremely robust and reliable, with a sufficient built-in 1120-nm pump power margin. Re-measurements of key RFA parameters, such as polarization purity and output beam quality, also confirmed that the RFA performance remained unchanged after the 1300-hour 100-W test. Assuming a conservative conversion efficiency of ~ 80% by a resonant frequency doubler and taking into account typical passive coupling losses into the doubler cavity of < 15%, narrow-linewidth CW guide star lasers with powers < 70 W at 589 nm can confidently be expected for future optical ground station adaptive optics systems. The RFA output power was shown to be solely limited by the SBS threshold. Since all the laser components showed sufficient higher optical power handling potential, it is expected that, with further optimization of the SBS suppression, the RFA output power can be scaled significantly beyond the current 100-W level.