Problems Collimating 1550nm light

  • Thread starter Thread starter djhon
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Light
AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on the challenges of collimating a 1550 nm light source, specifically the appearance of interference rings when using IR coated optics. The user has observed a clean profile from the fibered mono-mode source but encounters issues when introducing lenses, leading to persistent interference patterns. They have experimented with different fiber placements and lens types but continue to see these rings. Questions arise regarding whether the fringes are genuine and if they might result from reflections within the optical system. The user seeks advice on resolving this interference issue to achieve a clean, collimated beam.
djhon
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
Hello,

I'm trying to obtain a collimated beam from my 1550 nm light source.

I have a fibered mono-mode source and when I analyze its profile with an IR camera at one end of the fiber, it appears clean.

But when I put an IR coated microscope objective or an IR coated lens between the end of the fiber and the camera to start to build my collimation system, interference rings appear.

I know that, for reflection, when you use a thin glass slide (for example) you obtain interferences but here, I can't explain why I obtain this phenomenon in transmission.

I tried to change my fiber, to put the end of the fiber at the focus length of the microscope objective, then closer to the optic or further, to use a lens with small focus length (2.5 mm) and bigger focus length (20 mm) ... I obtain these rings all the time.

I'm sure I missed something simple.
Does anybody know how to deal with these rings ?
 
Science news on Phys.org
up :)
 
djhon said:
Hello,

I'm trying to obtain a collimated beam from my 1550 nm light source.

I have a fibered mono-mode source and when I analyze its profile with an IR camera at one end of the fiber, it appears clean.

But when I put an IR coated microscope objective or an IR coated lens between the end of the fiber and the camera to start to build my collimation system, interference rings appear.

I know that, for reflection, when you use a thin glass slide (for example) you obtain interferences but here, I can't explain why I obtain this phenomenon in transmission.

I tried to change my fiber, to put the end of the fiber at the focus length of the microscope objective, then closer to the optic or further, to use a lens with small focus length (2.5 mm) and bigger focus length (20 mm) ... I obtain these rings all the time.

I'm sure I missed something simple.
Does anybody know how to deal with these rings ?

Can you confirm that the fringes appearing in IR coated lens case is the true fringes ? Is your system fully functional with IR lens ? Are you certain that the fringes are not due to interference of the reflected part of your IR beam and the IR source ?
 
I would like to use a pentaprism with some amount of magnification. The pentaprism will be used to reflect a real image at 90 degrees angle but I also want the reflected image to appear larger. The distance between the prism and the real image is about 70cm. The pentaprism has two reflecting sides (surfaces) with mirrored coating and two refracting sides. I understand that one of the four sides needs to be curved (spherical curvature) to achieve the magnification effect. But which of the...

Similar threads

Replies
7
Views
1K
Replies
10
Views
3K
Replies
7
Views
2K
Replies
9
Views
3K
Replies
22
Views
3K
Replies
3
Views
2K
Back
Top