• Title/Summary/Keyword: Lasers' numerical aperture

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Estimation of optical losses in dielectric apertured terahertz vertical cavity lasers (개구 크기에 따른 테라헤르츠 표면 발광 반도체 레이저의 광손실에 대한 연구)

  • 유영훈
    • Korean Journal of Optics and Photonics
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    • v.14 no.1
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    • pp.92-96
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    • 2003
  • Dielectric apertures in vertical cavity laser have been used for improved device performance. Numerical analysis is used to estimate the optical losses as the aperture diameter is reduced. The optical losses depend on the aperture size, thickness and location. The optical loss strongly depend on the aperture size and thickness when the aperture size is similar or smaller than the emitted wavelength. The optical loss is negligible and not depend on the aperture thickness when the aperture size is larger than 5 times emitted wavelength.

Inscribed Transceiver Optical System Design for Laser Radar with Zoom-type Expander (줌렌즈 광속확대기를 적용한 레이저 레이더용 송수광 내접형 광학계 설계)

  • Koh, Hae Seog;Ok, Chang Min;Hong, Jin Sug;Lee, Chang Jae;Park, Chan Geun;Kim, Hyun Kyu
    • Korean Journal of Optics and Photonics
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    • v.24 no.1
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    • pp.23-28
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    • 2013
  • In this paper, an optical system was designed for 3D imaging laser radar with optical scanner. In order to make it easy to scan, the system was designed to inscribe the transmitting objective lens in the receiving lens. In transmitting optics, the beam expander was designed to have a zoom mechanism so that the transmitted beam size would be 4.8 m or 6.8 m at 1 km distance, when the laser source's numerical aperture value is between 0.13 and 0.22. The beam diameter at the target 1 km away was confirmed by design program. The receiving optics for the returning beam from the target was designed for the $16{\times}16$ array detector with $100{\mu}m$ pixel width. The spot diameter in every pixel was designed and verified to be less than $55{\mu}m$. The receiving optics' obscuration ratio by transmitting optics was 11%.

Compact Infrared/Visible Laser Transmitter Featuring an Extended Detectable Trajectory

  • Kim, Haeng-In;Lee, Hong-Shik;Lee, Sang-Shin
    • Journal of the Optical Society of Korea
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    • v.16 no.4
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    • pp.331-335
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    • 2012
  • A miniaturized laser beam transmitter, in which a visible laser module at ${\lambda}$=650 nm is precisely stacked upon an infrared (IR) module at ${\lambda}$=905 nm, has been proposed and constructed to provide an IR collimated beam in conjunction with a collinear monitoring visible beam. In particular, the IR beam is selectively dispersed through a perforated sheet diffuser, so as to create a rapidly diverging close-range beam in addition to a highly defined long-range beam simultaneously. The complementary close-range beam plays a role in mitigating the blind region in the vicinity of the transmitter, which is inevitably missed by the main long-range beam, thereby uniformly extending the transmitter's effective trajectory that is sensed by a receiver. The proposed transmitter was designed through numerical simulations and then fabricated by incorporating a diffuser sheet, perforated with an aperture of 2 mm. For the manufactured transmitter, the IR long-range beam was observed to have divergences of ~2.3 and 1.6 mrad in the fast and slow axes, respectively, while the short-range beam yielded a divergence of ~24 mrad. The angular alignment between the long-range IR and visible beams was as accurate as ~0.5 mrad. According to an outdoor feasibility test involving a receiver, the combination of the IR long- and short-range beams was proven to achieve a nearly uniform trajectory over a distance ranging up to ~600 m, with an average detectable cross-section of ${\sim}60{\times}80cm^2$.