Paper
25 June 2003 Thermally near-unstable cavity design for solid state lasers
Yan Feng, Yong Bi, Zuyan Xu, Guangyin Zhang
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Conventionally, lasers are designed to operate at the middle of thermally stable zones, where the fundamental mode size is insensitive to thermal perturbation, but is inversely proportional to width of stability zone, which will give rise to inconvenience or even difficulty in practice when large mode size is required. We propose a new simple approach, namely thermally-near-unstable resonator. The laser is designed to operate at the border of stability zone instead, where it has large fundamental mode size at gain media. With increase of pump power, mode size would grow up automatically to a value suitable for monomode operation. Stability of cavity on whole pump range can also be easily guaranteed. And there is a point where the laser power is insensitive to driving perturbations. However, the laser beam quality is sensitive to driving and thermal perturbations for the mode size depends severely on thermal focusing. Large-scale improvement in beam quality is demonstrated experimentally.
© (2003) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Yan Feng, Yong Bi, Zuyan Xu, and Guangyin Zhang "Thermally near-unstable cavity design for solid state lasers", Proc. SPIE 4969, Laser Resonators and Beam Control VI, (25 June 2003); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.472930
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CITATIONS
Cited by 17 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Resonators

Laser development

Solid state lasers

Laser resonators

Laser stabilization

Diffraction

Refractor telescopes

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