Abstract
A shared aperture system for two laser beams with different wavelengths and composed entirely of reflective phase gratings is described. Beams that share an aperture are collinear, and they have the same transverse phase profile across the aperture as their respective sources. Using the Talbot effect that is observed in Fresnel diffraction from periodic objects, we preserve the phase of the beams, and we maximize the efficiency of the system. An experimental Talbot shared aperture system using He–Ne and He–Cd beams has an efficiency of 88.1% for the He–Ne beam and 70.3% for the He–Cd beam. These measured efficiencies agree well with theoretical predictions and computer simulations.
© 1992 Optical Society of America
Full Article | PDF ArticleMore Like This
Liren Liu
Appl. Opt. 28(21) 4668-4678 (1989)
Paul Latimer and Randy F. Crouse
Appl. Opt. 31(1) 80-89 (1992)
Antti Vasara, Mohammad R. Taghizadeh, Jari Turunen, Jan Westerholm, Eero Noponen, Hiroyuki Ichikawa, J. Michael Miller, Tommi Jaakkola, and Sirpa Kuisma
Appl. Opt. 31(17) 3320-3336 (1992)