English

Quasi Monolithic Fiber Collimators

Optics 2024-08-13 v1

Abstract

Interferometric displacement measurements, especially in space interferometry applications, face challenges from thermal expansion. Bonded assemblies of ultra-low thermal expansion glass-ceramics offer a solution; however, transitioning from light transport in fibers to free beam propagation presents a notable challenge. These experiments often need an interface to convert between laser beams propagating through fiber optics into a well-defined free beam and vice versa. These interfaces must also be made of rigid glass pieces that can be bonded to a glass base plate. Current designs for these fiber collimators, often called fiber injector optical sub-assemblies, require multiple glass parts fabricated to very tight tolerances and assembled with special alignment tools. We present a simplified quasi-monolithic fiber collimator that can generate a well-collimated laser beam. The complexity and tolerances of bonding are reduced by combining the alignment of the fiber mode to the imaging lens in one step with active mode control: the welding of the fiber to the glass body. We produce several of these designs and test that the desired light field is achieved, its profile is described as a Gaussian beam, and the beam-pointing stability is acceptable for such a piece. In each case, they perform at least as well as a standard commercial fiber collimator. These Quasi Monolithic Fiber Collimators offer a promising and easy-to-implement solution to convert between free beam and fiber-coupled lasers in experiments sensitive to long term thermal drifts.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2408.06090,
  title  = {Quasi Monolithic Fiber Collimators},
  author = {Jonathan Joseph Carter and Steffen Böhme and Kevin Weber and Nina Bode and Karina Jorke and Anja Grobecker and Tobias Koch and Simone Fabia and Sina Maria Koehlenbeck},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2408.06090},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

TO be Submitted to optics applied

R2 v1 2026-06-28T18:10:21.090Z