Title: Laser Beam Coherence
1Laser Beam Coherence
- Purpose To determine the frequency separation
between - the axial modes of a He-Ne Laser
Theory of Measurement
All sources of light, including lasers, contain a
distribution of different wavelengths. The
interference of this non-monochromatic light with
itself creates a pattern of fringes. The
contrast of these fringes is a function of
distance from the maxima of contrast, which are
equidistant from each other. The distance
between a maximum and the nearest minimum is
called the coherence length of the laser. The
frequency spread ?? is easily calculated from
this length.
2Experimental Setup
- Setup
- Mount laser assembly (LA) to the far side of the
optics table (OT). Adjust the position so that
the beam is parallel to the edge and along the
tapped holes in the OT. - Mount a beam steering assembly (BSA) along the
beam path at the next corner of the OT and insert
a mirror mount. Adjust the height of the mirror
mount until the beam intersects the center of the
mirror. Rotate the post until the laser beam is
reflected at a 90 angle. - Place a second BSA in line with the laser beam at
the opposite corner of the OT. Adjust the mirror
mount until the laser beam is parallel to the
surface of the OT and rotated 90. - Insert a short focal length (25.4 mm) negative
lens (LP3) into a lens chuck assembly and mount
it five inches from the first BSA-I. Align the
lens so that the diverging beam is centered on
the mirror of the second BSA-I. - Insert a longer focal length (200mm) lens (LP2)
into an LCA and place is 225 mm from the first
lens in the diverging beam. Again, center the
beam on the second mirror. - Rotate the second BSA such that the beam returns
back through the two lenses just to either side
of the laser output aperture. - Carefully adjust the position of the last lens by
moving it back and forth along the beam until the
returning beam is the same size as the output
beam.
- Mount a 50/50 beam splitter into a lens chuck
assembly (LCA) and rotate the assembly 45 to the
optical path. - Mount a BSA with its mirror centered about the
path of the reflected beam five inches from the
beam splitter. Adjust the mirror until its beam
is directed back to the laser. - Mount a BSA on a stepper motor assembly with its
mirror centered about the path of the transmitted
beam. Adjust the mirror so that the beam is
retro-reflected back to the laser. - Mount an index card as an observation screen on
the other side of the beam splitter.
3Experimental Procedure
- Mount a camera as close to the observation screen
as possible without obstructing the laser beam.
Make sure the camera is as secure as possible.
Ideally, the camera lens should be parallel to
the observation screen. - Adjust the mirror position (using the stepper
motor) so that the path lengths are equal. Note
the light has to pass through the glass to
reflect off the beam splitter this additional
path length is approximately times the
thickness of the beam splitter. Record this
position. - At each position, adjust the fixed mirror so that
there are about five fringes. - Take pictures of the fringes with different
shutter speeds. Be sure not to move the camera
between pictures. - Using the stepper motor, move the mirror away
from the beam splitter in 1cm increments. At
each point, take another set of pictures with the
same camera settings.
4Photographing the Fringes
- Before photographing the fringes, we determined a
range of exposure times we wanted to use and
found, by an iterative process, the f-stop (f
11) that yielded the sharpest images across the
range of exposure times. - For each centimeter, a series of five photographs
was taken, each with a different shutter speed.
The f-stop was held constant at f11. Bracketing
the exposures in such a way increased the dynamic
range of the cameras CCD allowing us to better
analyze the contrast of the fringes. - The photographs were straightened and cropped
using Photoshop. - After straightening, the images were analyzed
using ImageJ. For each image, a rectangular
selection was made about the center of the image,
as shown, and the profile was plotted (Analyze-gt
Plot Profile). - From this profile, the list of points was copied
into Excel and plotted with the rest of the
profiles from the series. The maximum and minimum
intensities listed for each series was used to
calculated the percent contrast of the fringes.
5Data
- We exported intensity data from ImageJ to Excel
- Using the min and max of the center fringes, we
calculated contrast for each plot
93 Contrast
Used this range to find min/max
73 Contrast
1/2500 s
1/2500 s
1/2500 s
6Analysis I
- We calculated the contrast for each series of
photographs then plotted the results as a
function of position - This variation in contrast is due to the
coherence of the beam - The distance from max to min in contrast is the
coherence length - We fit the plot with a Sin function
- From the period of the Sin we extracted the
coherence length
7Analysis II
- The coherence length gives us the frequency
spread of the laser - We can compare this to the dimensions of the
laser to see how realistic our results are - where L is the length of the laser cavity and ?L
is the coherence length - Doubling the coherence length gives an estimate
of the laser cavity length - The difference in estimated cavity lengths is
likely due to an under-estimation of the internal
components of the laser
Measured Coherence Length Measured Laser Length
?L (m) L (m)
0.0885 0.24
Correction for Optics/ Electronics
0.03
Estimated Cavity Length (From Coherence Measurement) Estimated Cavity Length (From Laser Dimensions)
0.177 0.21
Frequency Spread Frequency Spread
?? (Hz) ?? (Hz)
8.5E08 7.1E08
8Error Discussion
- Range of motion
- Because of the range of the stepper motor we were
unable to fully explore the maxima because they
occurred near the ends of its track - Vibrations in the room
- Oscillations of the walls cause visible fringe
vibrations where time dependence was not expected - Uncertainty in path length
- Uncertainty in distance between beam splitter and
movable mirror is a few millimeters which gives
about 1 error in frequency spread - Time dependence
- Fringes fade in and out near minima position, and
because we took 5 separate exposures, it is
probable that the images were taken at different
relative phases - Incident camera angle
- We took the photographs at an angle relative to
the index card, shrinking the image 5
horizontally (cos(?inc)0.95) - Image compression
- Images stored as JPEG files, which results in
some compression. This should not be a large
source of error, as the JPEG algorithm mostly
removes higher frequency brightness variations,
which are likely noise.