Publications by authors named "J C Chanteloup"

We report on far field energy distribution control using a coherent beam combining femtosecond digital laser employing 61 tiled channels. Each channel is considered as an individual pixel where amplitude and phase are controlled independently. Applying a phase difference between neighboring fibers or neighboring fiber-lines gives high agility for far field energy distribution and paves the way for deeper exploration of phase patterns as a tool to further improve tiled-aperture CBC laser efficiency and far field shaping on demand.

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One of the most promising solutions to access high power laser chains is to achieve a coherent combination of a large number of elementary lasers. To interfere constructively, these laser sources should be identical and operate under the same conditions. However, despite these efforts, differential delays appear in the course of time, which must be compensated for.

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We report on the use of a 61 beamlets coherent beam combination femtosecond fiber amplifiers as a digital laser source to generate high-power orbital angular momentum beams. Such an approach opens the path for higher-order non-symmetrical user-defined far field distributions.

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We report on the coherent beam combining of 61 femtosecond fiber chirped-pulse amplifiers in a tiled-aperture configuration along with an interferometric phase measurement technique. Relying on coherent beam recombination in the far field, this technique appears suitable for the combination of a large number of fiber amplifiers. The 61 output beams are stacked in a hexagonal arrangement and collimated through a high fill factor hexagonal micro-lens array.

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Coherent beam combining in tiled-aperture configuration is demonstrated on seven femtosecond fiber amplifiers using an interferometric phase measurement technique. The residual phase error between two fibers is as low as λ/55 RMS and a combination efficiency of 48% has been achieved. The combined pulses are compressed to 216 fs, delivering 71 W average power at a repetition rate of 55 MHz.

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