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Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

The ESO transportable LGS Unit for measurements of the LGS photon return and other experiments

D. Bonaccini Calia; I. Guidolin; Axel Friedenauer; Manfred Hager; Vladimir Karpov; Thomas Pfrommer; Ronald Holzlöhner; Steffan Lewis; W. Hackenberg; Gianluca Lombardi; Mauro Centrone; Fernando Pedichini

Sodium laser guide stars (LGS) are used, or planned to be used, as single or multiple artificial beacons for Adaptive Optics in many present or future large and extremely large telescopes projects. In our opinion, several aspects of the LGS have not been studied systematically and thoroughly enough in the past to ensure optimal system designs. ESO has designed and built, with support from industry, an experimental transportable laser guide star unit, composed of a compact laser based on the ESO narrow-band Raman Fiber Amplifier patented technology, attached to a 30cm launch telescope. Besides field tests of the new laser technology, the purpose of the transportable unit is to conduct field experiments related to LGS and LGS-AO, useful for the optimization of future LGS-AO systems. Among the proposed ones are the validation of ESO LGS return flux simulations as a function of CW and pulsed laser properties, the feasibility of line-of-sight sodium profile measurements via partial CW laser modulation and tests of AO operation with elongated LGS in the EELT geometry configuration. After a description of the WLGSU and its main capabilities, results on the WLGSU commissioning and LGS return flux measurements are presented.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

RFA-based 589-nm guide star lasers for ESO VLT: a paradigm shift in performance, operational simplicity, reliability, and maintenance

Axel Friedenauer; Vladimir Karpov; Daoping Wei; Manfred Hager; Bernhard Ernstberger; Wallace R. L. Clements; Wilhelm Kaenders

Large telescopes equipped with adaptive optics require 20-25W CW 589-nm sources with emission linewidths of ~5 MHz. These Guide Star (GS) lasers should also be highly reliable and simple to operate and maintain for many years at the top of a mountain facility. Under contract from ESO, industrial partners TOPTICA and MPBC are nearing completion of the development of GS lasers for the ESO VLT, with delivery of the first of four units scheduled for December 2012. We report on the design and performance of the fully-engineered Pre-Production Unit (PPU), including system reliability/availability analysis, the successfully-concluded qualification testing, long-term component and system level tests and long-term maintenance and support planning. The chosen approach is based on ESOs patented narrow-band Raman Fiber Amplifier (EFRA) technology. A master oscillator signal from a linearly-polarized TOPTICA 20-mW, 1178-nm CW diode laser, with stabilized emission frequency and controllable linewidth up to a few MHz, is amplified in an MPBC polarization-maintaining (PM) RFA pumped by a high-power 1120-nm PM fiber laser. With efficient stimulated Brillouin scattering suppression, an unprecedented 40W of narrow-band RFA output has been obtained. This is then mode-matched into a resonant-cavity doubler with a free-spectral-range matching the sodium D2a to D2b separation, allowing simultaneous generation of an additional frequency component (D2b line) to re-pump the sodium atom electronic population. With this technique, the return flux can be increased without having to resort to electro-optical modulators and without the risk of introducing optical wave front distortions. The demonstrated output powers with doubling efficiencies >80% at 589 nm easily exceed the 20W design goal and require less than 700 W of electrical power. In summary, the fiber-based guide star lasers provide excellent beam quality and are modular, turn-key, maintenance-free, reliable, efficient, and ruggedized devices whose compactness allows installation directly onto the launch telescope structure.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

ESO adaptive optics facility progress and first laboratory test results

Robin Arsenault; Pierre-Yves Madec; Jerome Paufique; Paolo La Penna; Stefan Stroebele; Elise Vernet; Jean-Francois Pirard; W. Hackenberg; Harald Kuntschner; Johann Kolb; Nicolas Muller; Aurea Garcia-Rissmann; Miska Le Louarn; Paola Amico; Norbert Hubin; Jean-Louis Lizon; Rob Ridings; Pierre Haguenauer; José Antonio Abad; Gerhard Fischer; Volker Heinz; M. Kiekebusch; Javier Argomedo; Ralf Conzelmann; Sebastien Tordo; R. Donaldson; Christian Soenke; Philippe Duhoux; Enrico Fedrigo; Bernard Delabre

The Adaptive Optics Facility project is completing the integration of its systems at ESO Headquarters in Garching. The main test bench ASSIST and the 2nd Generation M2-Unit (hosting the Deformable Secondary Mirror) have been granted acceptance late 2012. The DSM has undergone a series of tests on ASSIST in 2013 which have validated its optical performance and launched the System Test Phase of the AOF. This has been followed by the performance evaluation of the GRAAL natural guide star mode on-axis and will continue in 2014 with its Ground Layer AO mode. The GALACSI module (for MUSE) Wide-Field-Mode (GLAO) and the more challenging Narrow-Field-Mode (LTAO) will then be tested. The AOF has also taken delivery of the second scientific thin shell mirror and the first 22 Watt Sodium laser Unit. We will report on the system tests status, the performances evaluated on the ASSIST bench and advancement of the 4Laser Guide Star Facility. We will also present the near future plans for commissioning on the telescope and some considerations on tools to ensure an efficient operation of the Facility in Paranal.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

PM fiber lasers at 589nm: a 20W transportable laser system for LGS return flux studies

Domenico Bonaccini Calia; Axel Friedenauer; Vladimir Protopopov; I. Guidolin; Luke Taylor; Vladimir Karpov; Manfred Hager; Wallace R. L. Clements; Bernhard Ernstberger; Steffan Lewis; Wilhelm Kaenders

In this paper we present the rationale and design of a compact, transportable, modular Laser Guide Star Unit, comprising a 589nm laser mounted on a 300mm launch telescope, to be used in future experiments probing the mesospheric sodium properties and to validate existing LGS return flux simulations. The 20W CW 589nm Laser is based on the ESO developed concept of 589nm lasers based on Raman Fiber Amplifiers, refined and assembled together with industry. It has the same laser architecture as the laser which will be used for the VLT Adaptive Optics Facility. We have added to the 20W CW laser system the capabilities of changing output polarization, D2b emission levels, power level, linewidth and to operate as pulsed laser with amplitude modulation. We focus in this paper on the laser description and test results.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Series production of next-generation guide-star lasers at TOPTICA and MPBC

Martin Enderlein; Axel Friedenauer; Robin Schwerdt; Paul Rehme; Daoping Wei; Vladimir Karpov; Bernhard Ernstberger; Patrick Leisching; Wallace R. L. Clements; Wilhelm Kaenders

Large telescopes equipped with adaptive optics require high power 589-nm continuous-wave sources with emission linewidths of ~5 MHz. These guide-star lasers should be highly reliable and simple to operate and maintain for many years at the top of a mountain facility. After delivery of the first 20-W systems to our lead customer ESO, TOPTICA and MPBC have begun series production of next-generation sodium guide-star lasers. The chosen approach is based on ESO’s patented narrow-band Raman fiber amplifier (RFA) technology [1]. A master oscillator signal from a TOPTICA 50-mW, 1178-nm diode laser, with stabilized emission frequency and linewidth of ~ 1 MHz, is amplified in an MPBC polarization-maintaining (PM) RFA pumped by a high-power 1120-nm PM fiber laser. With efficient stimulated Brillouin scattering suppression, an unprecedented 40 W of narrow-band RFA output has been obtained. This is spatially mode-matched into a patented resonant-cavity frequency doubler providing also the repumper light [2]. With a diffraction-limited output beam and doubling efficiencies < 80%, all ESO design goals have been easily fulfilled. Together with a wall-plug efficiency of < 3%, including all system controls, and a cooling liquid flow of only 5 l/min, the modular, turn-key, maintenance-free and compact system design allows a direct integration with a launch telescope. With these fiber-based guide star lasers, TOPTICA for the first time offers a fully engineered, off-the-shelf guide star laser system for ground-based optical telescopes. Here we present a comparison of test results of the first batch of laser systems, demonstrating the reproducibility of excellent optical characteristics.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

Diode-seeded Fiber-based Sodium Laser Guide Stars Ready for Deployment

Wilhelm Kaenders; Axel Friedenauer; Vladimir Karpov; Vladimir Protopopov; Wallace R. L. Clements; Luke Taylor; Yan Feng; Domenico Bonaccini Calia; Bernhard Ernstberger

The quest of the astronomical instrumentation community for high-power, narrow-band CW laser guide stars (LGS) has been a challenge to the laser community for more than two decades now. Only recently, a new generation of rugged laser system developments has started to provide the laser infrastructure for the next generation earth-bound telescopes. We report on the system design of four 20W CW diode-seeded fiber-amplified laser guide star for deployment at the VLT in 2013.


european quantum electronics conference | 2009

20 W at 589 nm via frequency doubling of coherently beam combined 2-MHz 1178-nm CW signals amplified in Raman PM fiber amplifiers

Luke Taylor; Axel Friedenauer; Vladimir Protopopov; Yan Feng; D. Bonaccini Calia; Vladimir Karpov; W. Hackenberg; Ronald Holzlöhner; Wallace R. L. Clements; Manfred Hager; F. Lison; Wilhelm Kaenders

We report the recent breakthroughs of our research activities carried out in the framework of the ESO R&D programs to develop 589-nm CW sources for laser guide stars[1] (LGS). Large telescopes equipped with adaptive optics require 20–25 W 589-nm CW light sources with an emission linewidth ≪ 50 MHz. Towards this goal, we have been working [2.3] on the development of high-power narrowband 1178-nm Raman fiber lasers with subsequent frequency doubling to 589 nm. Fiber lasers are an asset and probably the best laser type in remote and difficult operation sites like astronomical observatories. Typically, they are compact, maintenance-free, turn-key, ruggedized devices. Moreover their output beam quality is excellent, an important requirement for LGS. The lasers which we are aiming at are part of Laser Guide Star Facilities, in which the laser beam is projected at 90 km at the Earths Mesosphere, producing LGS by excitation and optical pumping of mesospheric sodium atoms.


Optics in Atmospheric Propagation and Adaptive Systems XVIII | 2015

Robust remote-pumping sodium laser for advanced LIDAR and guide star applications

Bernhard Ernstberger; Martin Enderlein; Axel Friedenauer; Robin Schwerdt; Daoping Wei; Vladimir Karpov; Patrick Leisching; Wallace Clements; Wilhelm Kaenders

The performance of large ground-based optical telescopes is limited due to wavefront distortions induced by atmospheric turbulence. Adaptive optics systems using natural guide stars with sufficient brightness provide a practical way for correcting the wavefront errors by means of deformable mirrors. Unfortunately, the sky coverage of bright stars is poor and therefore the concept of laser guide stars was invented, creating an artificial star by exciting resonance fluorescence from the mesospheric sodium layer about 90 km above the earth’s surface. Until now, mainly dye lasers or sumfrequency mixing of solid state lasers were used to generate laser guide stars. However, these kinds of lasers require a stationary laser clean room for operation and are extremely demanding in maintenance. Under a development contract with the European Southern Observatory (ESO) and W. M. Keck Observatory (WMKO), TOPTICA Photonics AG and its partner MPB Communications have finalized the development of a next-generation sodium guide star laser system which is available now as a commercial off-the-shelf product. The laser is based on a narrow-band diode laser, Raman fiber amplifier (RFA) technology and resonant second-harmonic generation (SHG), thus highly reliable and simple to operate and maintain. It emits > 22 W of narrow-linewidth (≈ 5 MHz) continuous-wave radiation at sodium resonance and includes a re-pumping scheme for boosting sodium return flux. Due to the SHG resonator acting as spatial mode filter and polarizer, the output is diffraction-limited with RMS wavefront error < λ/25. Apart from this unique optical design, a major effort has been dedicated to integrating all optical components into a ruggedized system, providing a maximum of convenience and reliability for telescope operators. The new remote-pumping architecture allows for a large spatial separation between the main part of the laser and the compact laser head. Together with a cooling-water flow of less than 5 l/min and an overall power consumption of < 700 W, the system offers a maximum of flexibility with minimal infrastructure demands on site. Each system is built in a modular way, based on the concept of line-replaceable units (LRU). A comprehensive system software, as well as an intuitive service GUI, allow for remote control and error tracking down to at least the LRU level. In case of a failure, any LRU can be easily replaced. With these fiber-based guide star lasers, TOPTICA for the first time offers a fully engineered, off-the-shelf guide star laser system for groundbased optical telescopes providing convenient, turn-key operation in remote and harsh locations. Reliability and flexibility will be beneficial in particular for advanced satellite and space debris tracking as well as LIDAR applications.


australian conference on optical fibre technology | 2011

18+2 W at 589 nm via frequency doubling of diode-laser-seeded 1178-nm CW PM Raman fiber amplifier for deployment at ESO VLT

Wilhelm Kaenders; Axel Friedenauer; Bernhard Ernstberger; Vladimir Karpov; Vladimir Protopopov; Wallace R. L. Clements; W. Hackenberg; D. Bonaccini Calia; St. A. Lewis

The rationale and design of a a 589-nm Laser Guide Star System, based on amplification of narrow-band diode laser seeds using ESOs patented Raman Fiber approach in the near infrared and subsequent resonant frequency doubling, developed and realized by two industrial partners is presented.


Archive | 2012

LASER SYSTEM TO GENERATE A LASER GUIDE STAR

Axel Friedenauer; Wilhelm Kaenders

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W. Hackenberg

European Southern Observatory

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D. Bonaccini Calia

European Southern Observatory

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Luke Taylor

European Southern Observatory

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I. Guidolin

European Southern Observatory

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Ronald Holzlöhner

European Southern Observatory

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Steffan Lewis

European Southern Observatory

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Yan Feng

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Aurea Garcia-Rissmann

European Southern Observatory

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