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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. Laser amplifier apparatus which comprises
a. a source providing a laser light beam,
b. means for splitting said beam into a plurality of beams,
c. a multiplicity of face pumped laser amplifiers, a plurality of said
amplifiers having a pair of planar bodies of laser material having their
end faces opposed to each other, optical pumping means disposed between
said opposed end faces for simultaneously optically pumping said pair of
bodies, and
d. said amplifiers being disposed in an array to provide a plurality of
paths each for a separate one of said beams along which each of said
separate beams is reflected successively between the bodies of laser
material in successive ones of said amplifiers whereby to amplify said
plurality of beams for application to a target.
2. Laser amplifier apparatus adapted for amplifying a plurality of laser
light beams, said apparatus comprising
a. a plurality of planar bodies of laser material each having major
surfaces with transverse dimensions larger than the lateral distance
between its major surfaces, said bodies being arranged in an array in
laterally offset and transversely spaced relationship to define a
plurality of separate paths through the array each for a different one of
said beams between different adjacent, transversely spaced ones of said
bodies, said beams entering and exiting each of said bodies through one of
its major surfaces and being reflected at the other major surfaces
thereof,
b. a plurality of optical pumping means adjacent to the other major
surfaces of said bodies to provide laser amplification of the beam passing
therethrough, and
c. a plurality of said bodies being disposed closely adjacent to the same
one of said optical pumping means to define a laser amplifier unit
containing a pair of said bodies with their said other major surfaces
disposed on opposite sides of one of said optical pumping means to thereby
both be illuminated by pumping energy therefrom.
3. The invention as set forth in claim 2 wherein said array consists of
columns and rows, said beam paths each extending through the space between
an adjacent pair of said rows.
4. The invention as set forth in claim 3 wherein each of said rows disposed
internally of said array contains a plurality of said laser amplifier
units which includes a pair of said bodies illuminated by the same one of
said optical pumping means.
5. The invention as set forth in claim 4 wherein the major faces of each of
said bodies in said array are parallel to each other.
6. The invention as set forth in claim 4 wherein the bodies in different
ones of said units are also transversely offset from each other to define
equal angles of incidence and reflection for said beams from said other
major surfaces thereof.
7. The invention as set forth in claim 6 including a laser which provides a
beam of laser light, beam splitting means for separating said beams into a
plurality of beams which are laterally spaced from each other
corresponding to the lateral spacing of said rows in said array and
directed to be incident upon different ones of said bodies in different
ones of said rows of the column at one edge of said array into which said
beams enter.
8. The invention as set forth in claim 7 including means disposed adjacent
to the columns at the edge of said array opposite from said one edge from
which said beams exit for directing said beams to be incident upon a
target region.
9. Laser apparatus comprising
a. a pair of bodies of laser material each having planar end surfaces
having transverse dimensions substantially larger than the lateral
thickness dimension across the edges of said body between said end
surfaces thereof,
b. said bodies being disposed closely adjacent to each other with an end
surface of one of said bodies being opposed to an end surface of the other
of said bodies to define a space therebetween,
c. optical pumping means disposed in said space for illuminating said
bodies simultaneously through their said opposed end surfaces, and
d. housing means assembling said bodies and pumping means into a unitary
structure open at each of said end surfaces of said bodies opposite to
their said opposed end surfaces for receiving and emitting laser radiation
therethrough.
10. The invention as set forth in claim 9 wherein said bodies are plates of
laser glass, and said pumping means includes a bank of lamps extending
parallel to the end surfaces of said plates, said opposed end surfaces
being coated to define a film transmissive for radiation at said pumping
wavelengths and reflective for the laser radiation wavelength from said
bodies.
11. The invention as set forth in claim 10 including a means disposed
between each of said plates of laser glass and said lamp bank for defining
chambers each filled with liquid, said chamber defining means and said
liquid having high transmission for radiation of pumping wavelengths from
said lamps and said liquid having high absorption for laser radiation
wavelength from said bodies.
12. The invention as set forth in claim 11 wherein said liquid has
substantially the same index of refraction as said laser glass.
13. The invention as set forth in claim 11 including means defining walls
on the opposite sides of said lamp bank, said housing means, said walls
and said chamber defining means further defining second chambers each
between said liquid filled chambers and a different one of said walls,
said second chamber having vents thereto for the filling thereof with an
inert gas.
14. The invention as set forth in claim 13 including means for circulating
cooling fluid between said opposite walls around said lamp bank. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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The present invention relates to laser apparatus and particularly to
multibeam high power laser amplifiers.
The invention is especially suitable for use in laser fusion systems for
providing a multiplicity of high power laser beams which can be
simultaneously applied to a target region containing nuclear fusion fuel,
such as deuterium pellets and the like, so as to produce nuclear fusion
reactions.
In laser fusion systems it is necessary to provide laser light energy of
extremely high levels and concentration in order to produce the requisite
nuclear fusion reactions. It is desirable that the laser light be provided
in a number of beams which are then made incident upon the target region
of the reactor which contains the nuclear fuel. In this way the target may
be more uniformly illuminated and, since each beam may be separately
amplified, the total energy directed to the target may be increased.
Reference may be had to U.S. Pat. No. 3,723,246 issued to M. J. Lubin on
Mar. 23, 1973 for further information respecting laser fusion systems.
In laser amplifiers, optical pumps such as flash lamps irradiate bodies of
laser material with high intensity electromagnetic radiation having the
appropriate wave length to be absorbed in the laser material. The laser
light is then generated, by the well-known laser effect, into coherent
electromagnetic radiation of the wave length characteristic of the laser
material. The energy requirements of laser fusion systems make the overall
efficiency of conversion of the pumping radiation into laser light
extremely significant, particularly as regards the cost of operating and
constructing laser fusion systems and reactors is concerned.
A particularly suitable laser configuration for providing high power gain
laser amplification is the so-called "face-pumped laser device". Such
devices include a disc or slab of an active laser material having planar
end surfaces with transverse areas which are large as compared to the
thickness of the slab as measured in the lateral direction across its
edges between the planar end surfaces. Inasmuch as the optical pumping
radiation can be applied by way of the planar end surfaces substantially
isometrically throughout the body of laser materials, significant amounts
of pumping energy can be applied to the laser material with more
uniformity than is the case with rods or other geometric configurations of
the laser material. Reference may be had to the following patents as well
as to the patents and publications mentioned therein for further
information respecting face-pumped lasers: U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,500,231;
3,525,053; 3,534,291; 3,581,229; 3,679,996; and 3,679,999.
It has been found, in accordance with the invention, that a plurality of
laser beams can be amplified simultaneously and with high efficiency
through the use of an array of face-pumped lasers wherein the laser units
are arranged in the array to provide a plurality of paths in each of which
different ones of the laser beams are separately reflected between
successive bodies of laser material in different face-pumped laser units.
The face pumped laser units are provided by bodies of laser material which
have their end faces adjacent and opposed to each other. Optical pumping
means are located between the adjacent opposed end faces and
simultaneously pump both laser material bodies. In other words, a single
optical pumping means, say utilizing a single bank of flash lamps, drives
two laser amplifiers which are arranged in the array to provide active
mirror amplifiers for the plurality of laser light beams.
By virtue of the aforementioned arrangement of active laser material bodies
and pumping means, the efficiency of the multibeam laser amplifier system
may nearly be doubled with the resulting constructional and operational
advantages. The efficiencies are obtained even as compared to optical
pumping arrays using reflectors; it having been found that such reflectors
add only about 18 percent to the optical flux obtained by pumping without
the use of such reflectors.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide improved
laser apparatus.
It is another object of the present invention to provide apparatus for
producing high power laser energy through the amplification of a
multiplicity of laser beams with high efficiency.
It is a still further object of the present invention to provide laser
apparatus for the generation of high power laser energy which is
especially adapted for use in laser fusion reactors and other laser fusion
systems.
The foregoing and other objects and advantages of the invention will be
more readily apparent from a reading of the following description in
connection with the accompanying drawings in which:
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a double sided active mirror laser
amplifier unit in accordance with the invention;
FIG. 2 is a cross sectional view of the amplifier unit shown in FIG. 1, the
section being taken along the line 2--2 in FIG. 1; and
FIG. 3 is a schematic view illustrating a multibeam high power laser
amplifier system utilizing laser amplifier units of the type shown in
FIGS. 1 and 2, the system embodying the invention.
Referring to FIGS. 1 and 2, there is shown a double sided active mirror
laser amplifier unit 10. The envelope of this unit is a rectangular
parallelepiped. Within a metal frame 12, there is disposed a rectangular
disc or plate 14 of laser material. The end surfaces of the laser glass
body 14 are planar and have transverse dimensions which may typically be
15 to 20 centimeters in length by 10 to 15 centimeters in width. The
thickness dimension of the glass may be about ten percent of the maximum
length of the disc. The material of the plate 14 may be a neodymium doped
glass. In this case the Nd.sub.2 O.sub.3 doping of the glass may be
decreased as the thickness of the glass increases so as to maintain a more
uniform deposition of energy in glass and therefore minimize distortion of
the glass due to thermal gradients.
A chamber 16 is provided in the frame 12 behind the inner end surface of
the plate 14 by a plate 18 of heat resistant glass, such as Pyrex. The
active laser glass 14 is spaced from the sheet 18 by a number of spacers
15 which are L-shaped blocks disposed around the inner perimeter of the
frame 12. By virtue of the spacers 15 the laser glass 14 and the sheet 18
are held in sealed relationship against 0 rings 13 and 19. The chamber 16
thus extends around the outer edges of the laser glass 14.
The chamber 16 is filled with a liquid which serves both as a heat transfer
medium and for optical purposes as will be later explained. A suitable
medium is a ferric chloride solution. Preferred, however, is the liquid,
supplied by the Owens Illinois Company and described in an article by Dube
and Boling appearing in Applied Optics, April 1974, Page 669 et seq and
entitled "Liquid Cladding for Face Pumped Nd: Glass Lasers."
The front surface of the laser glass plate 14 is desirably coated with a
film 25 which transmits and prevents reflection of radiation at the laser
energy wavelength. For the neodymium doped glass this wavelength is 1.06
micrometers. Various dielectric coatings are available for this purpose,
magnesium oxide being suitable. A coating, which may be in the form of a
multi-layer dielectric film 27 on the inner end surface of the laser glass
plate 14, provides high reflectance for the laser energy wavelength (1.06
micrometers) as well as high transmission at optical pumping radiation
wavelengths. The latter wavelengths are where the neodymium glass laser
material absorbs the pumping energy, and may be in the wavelength interval
from 0.35 to 0.9 micrometers.
A bank of flash lamps 32, which may be in the form of tubes which extend
through a rectangular frame 30 at the ends thereof, are contained between
sheets 22 and 24 of heat resistant glass such as Pyrex. Ports 41 and 43
extend through the upper and lower sides of the frame 30. Water or other
cooling fluid may be circulated through the chamber 29 formed by the frame
30 and the sheets 22 and 24 for purposes of cooling the lamps 30. The
lamps 30 may be Xenon flash lamps which provide pumping radiation in the
bands where the laser glass has high absorption (viz, 0.35 to 0.9
micrometers).
A plurality of notches 26 and 26' may be provided along the inner edge of
the frame 12 so that an inert gas such as nitrogen may be circulated
through a space or chamber 20 which is provided between the plates 18 and
22 for further improving the heat transfer characteristics of the
amplifier unit, and also avoiding ionization effects of more active gases,
such as air.
Symmetrically disposed about the lamps 32 is the other side of the
two-sided active mirror amplifier unit 10. This side is made up of a laser
glass plate 38 with anti-reflective coating 35 and reflective coating 37.
A sheet 39 of heat resistant glass, such as Pyrex, is spaced behind the
inner end surface of the laser glass plate 38 and defines a chamber 36
which is fluid filled with a fluid of the same type as used in the chamber
16. Notches 28 provide for the flow of the inert gas such as Nitrogen
through the space of chamber 34 between the glass sheet 24 which defines
the lamp container and the glass sheet 39. O rings 21 and 23 and spacers
17 locate the laser glass sheet 38 and plate 39 in a rectangular frame 40.
The frame 40 is similar to the frame 12; the laser glass plate 38 and the
plate 14 are also similar as are the dimensions and locations of the other
similar parts of each of the active mirror sides of the unit 10.
The lamps 32 may be flashed by electrical energy, say from a condenser
bank, being applied across the lamps via terminals at the opposite ends
thereof. When the lamps are flashed they provide high levels of
illumination which is transmitted through the Pyrex sheets 18, 22, 24, 39,
to the laser glass plates 14 and 38. The illumination passes through the
liquid in the chambers 16 and 36 since that liquid is characterized by
high transmissivity at the pumping wavelengths produced by the discharge
in the lamps 32. The liquid in the chambers 16 and 36 is also
characterized by having high absorption of the laser energy wavelengths
(1.06 micrometers). As will be explained more fully in connection with
FIG. 3, the amplifiers operate by amplifying laser light which enters
through their forward end surfaces and is incident on and is reflected
from the reflective film or coatings 27, 37, on the inner or mirror
surfaces of the active laser material. Spurious laser emission, at the
laser light wavelength, which may occur due to transverse reflections from
the edges of the laser glass plates 14 and 38, are absorbed by the liquid
and thus suppressed. The liquid not only provides for heat transfer and
cooling of the laser glass, but by virtue of its extending around the
edges of the laser glass plates, absorbs laser emission which might be
reflected in the transverse direction and thus not contribute to the gain
and amplification provided by the laser material.
The laser amplifier units may for example be located on an optical bench
and spaced slightly from the surface of the bench. The arrangement may be
covered by a hood which is filled with inert gas such as Nitrogen. The gas
then will circulate through the vents provided by the notches 26 and 28,
thus reducing the possibility of any ionization of the atmosphere which
may absorb pumping energy and thus reduce the efficiency of the amplifier
system.
It will be appreciated that bolts and screws for assembling the frames 12,
30 and 40 such that they may provide an integral assembly, have been
omitted to simplify the illustration. In the event that only a
single-sided active mirror amplifier is needed, one of the mirror units
may be removed, thus either single or double sided units may be provided
as may be needed for various system requirements. It will be observed as
the description proceeds that some of the amplifier units in the array
shown in FIG. 3 need only be single sided active mirror units. The mirror
units illustrated in connection with FIGS. 1 and 2 are therefore
advantageous in that they may be used either in their single or double
mirror configuration.
Referring more particularly to FIG. 3, there is shown a multibeam laser
amplifier system which embodies the invention. The system as illustrated
provides for the amplification of four beams indicated as I, II, III and
IV. These beams are obtained from a single source indicated as a laser
oscillator 42 and preamplifier 44. While the beams are shown as single ray
paths, it will be appreciated that they have areas commensurate with the
areas of the end surfaces of the laser glass (14, 38, FIGS. 1 and 2) of
the amplifier units. The laser oscillator may be a commercially available
oscillator which produces a pulse when triggered. The preamplifier 44 may
be a rod type laser amplifier utilizing a neodymium glass rod surrounded
by linear flash lamps. The amplified beam is passed through a beam
splitter arrangement 46 consisting of three beam splitters 48, 50 and 52,
and three reflecting mirrors 54, 56, 58, which provide the four input
beams with equal power. Additional beam splitters may be used to provide
additional beams. In the event that only two beams are needed, one of the
beam splitter and mirror sets, say that consisting of the mirrors 54 and
58 and the beam splitter 52, may be omitted; as may be the amplifier units
which amplify the third and fourth beams III and IV.
It will be understood that the input beams may have different energy levels
and that different amplification may be provided by providing amplifier
units with different gain in the different beam paths.
A matrix or array 60 of amplifier units is provided for amplifying the
laser light beams 1 through IV. The array as illustrated provides for six
stages of amplification for each beam; more stages being used if desired.
The array is provided by a multiplicity of laser amplifier units 62
through 90. The units are arranged in rows and columns. The units are
laterally offset from each other in each row so as to provide a path for
reflection of the beams between the units which make up adjacent rows.
Thus, the first beam is reflected beween the row consisting of the three
units 62, 64 and 66, and the row consisting of the units 68, 70 and 72. It
will be noted that the units 62, 64 and 66 as well as the units 86, 88 and
90 in the rows which define the edges of the array, are single-sided
active mirror units; whereas the remaining units are double sided active
mirror units, as shown in FIGS. 1 and 2. The flash lamps of the double
sided units in the second, third and fourth rows, thus serve the purpose
of providing optical pumping energy for amplifying, not one, but two, of
the beams which are amplified by the array. This affords the
above-mentioned increased efficiency of the multibeam laser amplifier
system as provided by the invention. Other increases in efficiency are
afforded by the features of construction of the amplifier unit described
in connection with FIGS. 1 and 2.
As shown in FIG. 3, the input beams may be equally spaced from each other.
The spacing of the amplifier units in the array will then be equal (i.e.
equal spacings of rows and columns). It will be appreciated that other
spacings may be provided in the event that it is desired to change the
direction of the beams within the array. It also may be desired to utilize
only double-sided active mirror units in the array which thereby still
further enhance the efficiency of operation of the system. In that event,
reflectors may be provided so as to direct the beams in the reverse
direction (i.e. from the output end of the array to the input end of the
array) so as to pass successively through the laser material bodies of the
double-sided mirrors in the rows at the edges of the array. Alternatively,
it may be desired to provide only two input beams and then to utilize
beams splitters at the output end of the array. The portions of the output
beams may then be reflected backwardly along paths which include
reflectors and the active mirrors provided by the reflectively coated
laser materials of double-sided units disposed along the rows at the edges
of the array. Two of the split beams may then be afforded with additional
amplification before being reflected in the output direction as an
additional output beam. By substituting mirrors for amplifier units in the
array and by changing the power gain of individual units, various
combinations of output beam power may be afforded, as desired.
Reflectors 92 or other focussing means are provided for reflecting the
output beams onto a target region 94 which may be within a laser fusion
reactor. Nuclear fusion fuel, such as deuterium pellets may be located in
the target region. Then, by simultaneously triggering the laser oscillator
and the flash lamps in the preamplifier as well as in the laser amplifier
system a laser beam pulse is generated and amplified so as to result in
nuclear fusion reactions at the target region 94. It is also possible to
provide various electronic delays in different ones of the beam paths so
as to shape different ones of the beam, say for pre-exitation purposes as
described in the above referenced Lubin patent.
From the foregoing description it will be apparent that there has been
provided improved laser apparatus which can provide a multiplicity of high
power laser beams which are especially suitable for use in laser fusion
systems. In addition to the variations and modifications of the
hereindescribed laser amplifiers and laser amplifier systems, other
modifications and variations within the scope of the invention, will
undoubtedly suggest themselves to those skilled in the art. Accordingly,
the foregoing description should be taken merely as illustrative and not
in any limiting sense.
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Description  |
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