Emma Lindley
University of Sydney
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Emma Lindley.
Optics Express | 2014
Emma Lindley; Seong-sik Min; Sergio G. Leon-Saval; Nick Cvetojevic; Jon Lawrence; Simon C. Ellis; Joss Bland-Hawthorn
Fiber Bragg gratings in multicore fibers have significant potential as compact and robust filters for research and commercial applications. With the aid of an innovative, flat-fielded Mach-Zehnder interferometer, we demonstrate deep (>30 dB) narrow (100 pm at 3 dB; 90 pm at 10 dB) notches in the outer 6 cores of a 7-core fiber at a constant wavelength ( ± 15 pm). This is a crucial step in the development of FBGs operating within multimode fibers that carry an arbitrary number of spatial modes.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
Emma Lindley; Seong-sik Min; Sergio G. Leon-Saval; Nick Cvetojevic; Nemanja Jovanovic; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; Jon Lawrence; Itandehui Gris-Sánchez; T. A. Birks; Roger Haynes; Dionne M. Haynes
Multi-core fiber Bragg gratings (MCFBGs) will be a valuable tool not only in communications but also various astronomical, sensing and industry applications. In this paper we address some of the technical challenges of fabricating effective multi-core gratings by simulating improvements to the writing method. These methods allow a system designed for inscribing single-core fibers to cope with MCFBG fabrication with only minor, passive changes to the writing process. Using a capillary tube that was polished on one side, the field entering the fiber was flattened which improved the coverage and uniformity of all cores.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
Joss Bland-Hawthorn; Seong-sik Min; Emma Lindley; Sergio G. Leon-Saval; Simon C. Ellis; Jon Lawrence; Nicolas Beyrand; Martin M. Roth; Hans-Gerd Löhmannsröben; Sylvain Veilleux
For the past forty years, optical fibres have found widespread use in ground-based and space-based instruments. In most applications, these fibres are used in conjunction with conventional optics to transport light. But photonics offers a huge range of optical manipulations beyond light transport that were rarely exploited before 2001. The fundamental obstacle to the broader use of photonics is the difficulty of achieving photonic action in a multimode fibre. The first step towards a general solution was the invention of the photonic lantern1 in 2004 and the delivery of high-efficiency devices (< 1 dB loss) five years on2. Multicore fibres (MCF), used in conjunction with lanterns, are now enabling an even bigger leap towards multimode photonics. Until recently, the single-moded cores in MCFs were not sufficiently uniform to achieve telecom (SMF-28) performance. Now that high-quality MCFs have been realized, we turn our attention to printing complex functions (e.g. Bragg gratings for OH suppression) into their N cores. Our first work in this direction used a Mach-Zehnder interferometer (near-field phase mask) but this approach was only adequate for N=7 MCFs as measured by the grating uniformity3. We have now built a Sagnac interferometer that gives a three-fold increase in the depth of field sufficient to print across N ≥ 127 cores. We achieved first light this year with our 500mW Sabre FRED laser. These are sophisticated and complex interferometers. We report on our progress to date and summarize our first-year goals which include multimode OH suppression fibres for the Anglo-Australian Telescope/PRAXIS instrument and the Discovery Channel Telescope/MOHSIS instrument under development at the University of Maryland.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
Emma Lindley; Seong-sik Min; Sergio G. Leon-Saval; Joss Bland-Hawthorn
Fiber Bragg gratings are used in astronomy for their ability to suppress narrow atmospheric emission lines of temporally varying brightness before the light is dispersed. These gratings can only operate in a single-mode fiber as the suppressed wavelength depends on mode velocity in the core. Recent experiments with fibers containing multiple single-moded cores have demonstrated the potential for inscribing identical gratings across all cores in a single pass. We have already improved the uniformity of gratings in 7-core fibers via modifications to the writing process; further progress can be achieved by tuning the gratings of the outer and inner cores relative to one another. Our eventual goal is to make the entire fiber suppress one wavelength to a depth of 30 dB or greater. By coating the fiber in a heat-conductive material with a high expansion coefficient, we can examine the effects of temperature and strain on the spectral response of each core. In this paper we present methods and results from experiments concerning the post-write tuning of gratings in multicore fibers.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
Joss Bland-Hawthorn; Simon C. Ellis; Luke Gers; Roger Haynes; Anthony Horton; Jon Lawrence; Sergio G. Leon-Saval; Emma Lindley; Seong-sik Min; Keith Shortridge; Nick Staszak; Christopher Trinh; Pascal Xavier; Ross Zhelem
PRAXIS is a second generation instrument that follows on from GNOSIS, which was the first instrument using fibre Bragg gratings for OH suppression to be deployed on a telescope. The Bragg gratings reflect the NIR OH lines while being transparent to the light between the lines. This gives in principle a much higher signal-noise ratio at low resolution spectroscopy but also at higher resolutions by removing the scattered wings of the OH lines. The specifications call for high throughput and very low thermal and detector noise so that PRAXIS will remain sky noise limited even with the low sky background levels remaining after OH suppression. The optical and mechanical designs are presented. The optical train starts with fore-optics that image the telescope focal plane on an IFU which has 19 hexagonal microlenses each feeding a multi-mode fibre. Seven of these fibres are attached to a fibre Bragg grating OH suppression system while the others are reference/acquisition fibres. The light from each of the seven OH suppression fibres is then split by a photonic lantern into many single mode fibres where the Bragg gratings are imprinted. Another lantern recombines the light from the single mode fibres into a multi-mode fibre. A trade-off was made in the design of the IFU between field of view and transmission to maximize the signal-noise ratio for observations of faint, compact objects under typical seeing. GNOSIS used the pre-existing IRIS2 spectrograph while PRAXIS will use a new spectrograph specifically designed for the fibre Bragg grating OH suppression and optimised for 1.47 μm to 1.7 μm (it can also be used in the 1.09 μm to 1.26 μm band by changing the grating and refocussing). This results in a significantly higher transmission due to high efficiency coatings, a VPH grating at low incident angle and optimized for our small bandwidth, and low absorption glasses. The detector noise will also be lower thanks to the use of a current generation HAWAII-2RG detector. Throughout the PRAXIS design, from the fore-optics to the detector enclosure, special care was taken at every step along the optical path to reduce thermal emission or stop it leaking into the system. The spectrograph design itself was particularly challenging in this aspect because practical constraints required that the detector and the spectrograph enclosures be physically separate with air at ambient temperature between them. At present, the instrument uses the GNOSIS fibre Bragg grating OH suppression unit. We intend to soon use a new OH suppression unit based on multicore fibre Bragg gratings which will allow an increased field of view per fibre. Theoretical calculations show that the gain in interline sky background signal-noise ratio over GNOSIS may very well be as high as 9 with the GNOSIS OH suppression unit and 17 with the multicore fibre OH suppression unit.
Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VII | 2018
Simon C. Ellis; Svend-Marian Bauer; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; Scott W. Case; Thomas Fechner; Domenico Giannone; Roger Haynes; Eloy Hernandez; Anthony Horton; Urs Klauser; Jonathan Lawrence; Seong-sik Min; Naveen Pai; M. Roth; Pascal Xavier; Ross Zhelem; Hans-Gerd Löhmannsröben; Carlos Bacigalupo; Julia J. Bryant; Sergio G. Leon-Saval; Emma Lindley; Lewis Waller; Keith Shortridge
The problem of atmospheric emission from OH molecules is a long standing problem for near-infrared astronomy. PRAXIS is a unique spectrograph which is fed by fibres that remove the OH background and is optimised specifically to benefit from OH-Suppression. The OH suppression is achieved with fibre Bragg gratings, which were tested successfully on the GNOSIS instrument. PRAXIS uses the same fibre Bragg gratings as GNOSIS in its first implementation, and will exploit new, cheaper and more efficient, multicore fibre Bragg gratings in the second implementation. The OH lines are suppressed by a factor of ∼ 1000, and the expected increase in the signal-to-noise in the interline regions compared to GNOSIS is a factor of ∼ 9 with the GNOSIS gratings and a factor of ∼ 17 with the new gratings. PRAXIS will enable the full exploitation of OH suppression for the first time, which was not achieved by GNOSIS (a retrofit to an existing instrument that was not OH-Suppression optimised) due to high thermal emission, low spectrograph transmission and detector noise. PRAXIS has extremely low thermal emission, through the cooling of all significantly emitting parts, including the fore-optics, the fibre Bragg gratings, a long length of fibre, and the fibre slit, and an optical design that minimises leaks of thermal emission from outside the spectrograph. PRAXIS has low detector noise through the use of a Hawaii-2RG detector, and a high throughput through a efficient VPH based spectrograph. PRAXIS will determine the absolute level of the interline continuum and enable observations of individual objects via an IFU. In this paper we give a status update and report on acceptance tests.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
Simon C. Ellis; Svend-Marian Bauer; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; Scott W. Case; Thomas Fechner; Domenico Giannone; Roger Haynes; Eloy Hernandez; Anthony Horton; Urs Klauser; Jon Lawrence; Sergio G. Leon-Saval; Emma Lindley; Hans-Gerd Löhmannsröben; Seong-sik Min; Naveen Pai; M. Roth; Keith Shortridge; Nicholas F. Staszak; Julia Tims; Pascal Xavier; Ross Zhelem
Atmospheric emission from OH molecules is a long standing problem for near-infrared astronomy. PRAXIS is a unique spectrograph, currently in the build-phase, which is fed by a fibre array that removes the OH background. The OH suppression is achieved with fibre Bragg gratings, which were tested successfully on the GNOSIS instrument. PRAXIS will use the same fibre Bragg gratings as GNOSIS in the first implementation, and new, less expensive and more efficient, multicore fibre Bragg gratings in the second implementation. The OH lines are suppressed by a factor of ~1000, and the expected increase in the signal-to-noise in the interline regions compared to GNOSIS is a factor of ~ 9 with the GNOSIS gratings and a factor of ~ 17 with the new gratings. PRAXIS will enable the full exploitation of OH suppression for the first time, which was not achieved by GNOSIS due to high thermal emission, low spectrograph transmission, and detector noise. PRAXIS will have extremely low thermal emission, through the cooling of all significantly emitting parts, including the fore-optics, the fibre Bragg gratings, a long length of fibre, and a fibre slit, and an optical design that minimises leaks of thermal emission from outside the spectrograph. PRAXIS will achieve low detector noise through the use of a Hawaii-2RG detector, and a high throughput through an efficient VPH based spectrograph. The scientific aims of the instrument are to determine the absolute level of the interline continuum and to enable observations of individual objects via an IFU. PRAXIS will first be installed on the AAT, then later on an 8m class telescope.
Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2016
Emma Lindley; Seong-sik Min; Sergio G. Leon-Saval; Nick Cvetojevic; Jon Lawrence; Simon C. Ellis; Joss Bland-Hawthorn
Fiber Bragg gratings in multicore fibers can be used as compact and robust filters in astronomical and other research and commercial applications. Strong suppression at a single wavelength requires that all cores have matching transmission profiles. These gratings cannot be inscribed using the same method as for single-core fibers because the curved surface of the cladding acts as a lens, focusing the incoming UV laser beam and causing variations in exposure between cores. Therefore we use an additional optical element to ensure that the beam shape does not change while passing through the cross-section of the multicore fiber. This consists of a glass capillary tube which has been polished flat on one side, which is then placed over the section of the fiber to be inscribed. The laser beam enters the fiber through the flat surface of the capillary tube and hence maintains its original dimensions. This paper demonstrates the improvements in core-to-core uniformity for a 7-core fiber using this method. The technique can be generalized to larger multicore fibers.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010
Tara Murphy; Elaine M. Sadler; R. D. Ekers; M. Massardi; Paul Hancock; E. K. Mahony; R. Ricci; S. Burke-Spolaor; Mark R. Calabretta; Rajan Chhetri; Gianfranco De Zotti; Philip G. Edwards; Jennifer A. Ekers; C. A. Jackson; M. J. Kesteven; Emma Lindley; Katherine Newton-McGee; Christopher J. Phillips; P. Roberts; Robert J. Sault; Lister Staveley-Smith; Ravi Subrahmanyan; Mark A. Walker; Warwick E. Wilson
The Astrophysical Journal | 2011
Ilana J. Feain; Tim J. Cornwell; R. D. Ekers; Mark R. Calabretta; R. P. Norris; M. Johnston-Hollitt; Juergen Ott; Emma Lindley; B. M. Gaensler; Tara Murphy; Enno Middelberg; S. Jiraskova; Shane P. O'Sullivan; N. M. McClure-Griffiths; Joss Bland-Hawthorn