Micha Nixon
Weizmann Institute of Science
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Publication
Featured researches published by Micha Nixon.
Nature Photonics | 2013
Micha Nixon; Ori Katz; Eran Small; Yaron Bromberg; Asher A. Friesem; Yaron Silberberg; Nir Davidson
The self-organization of many laser modes in phase and frequency realized by minimizing radiation losses in a cavity enables the complex wavefront required to focus light scattered by turbid samples to be generated on sub-microsecond timescales without employing electronic feedback, spatial light modulators or phase-conjugation crystals.
Optics Letters | 2013
Micha Nixon; Brandon Redding; Asher A. Friesem; Hui Cao; Nir Davidson
An efficient method to tune the spatial coherence of a degenerate laser over a broad range with minimum variation in the total output power is presented. It is based on varying the diameter of a spatial filter inside the laser cavity. The number of lasing modes supported by the degenerate laser can be controlled from 1 to 320,000, with less than a 50% change in the total output power. We show that a degenerate laser designed for low spatial coherence can be used as an illumination source for speckle-free microscopy that is nine orders of magnitude brighter than conventional thermal light.
Physical Review Letters | 2012
Micha Nixon; Moti Fridman; Eitan Ronen; Asher A. Friesem; Nir Davidson; Ido Kanter
Synchronization in large laser networks with both homogeneous and heterogeneous coupling delay times is examined. The number of synchronized clusters of lasers is established to equal the greatest common divisor of network loops. We experimentally demonstrate up to 16 multicluster phase synchronization scenarios within unidirectional coupled laser networks, whereby synchronization in heterogeneous networks is deduced by mapping to an equivalent homogeneous network. The synchronization in large laser networks is controlled by means of tunable coupling and self-coupling.
Optics Letters | 2010
Moti Fridman; Micha Nixon; Nir Davidson; Asher A. Friesem
Our experiments on passively phase locking two-dimensional arrays of coupled fiber lasers reveal that the average phase locking level of 25 lasers is low (20%-30%) but can exceed 90% in rare brief events. The average phase locking level was found to decrease for a larger number of lasers in the array and to increase with the connectivity of the array.
Optics Letters | 2010
Moti Fridman; Micha Nixon; Mark Dubinskii; Asher A. Friesem; Nir Davidson
The results of amplifying either radially or azimuthally polarized light with a fiber amplifier are presented. Experimental results reveal that more than 85% polarization purity can be retained at the output even with 40 dB amplification and that efficient conversion of the amplified light to linear polarization can be obtained.
Optics Letters | 2010
Moti Fridman; Micha Nixon; Eitan Ronen; Asher A. Friesem; Nir Davidson
Detailed experimental and theoretical investigations of two coupled fiber lasers, each with many longitudinal modes, reveal that the behavior of the longitudinal modes depends on both the coupling strength and the detuning between them. For low to moderate coupling strength only longitudinal modes that are common for both lasers phase lock, while those that are not common gradually disappear. For larger coupling strengths, the longitudinal modes that are not common reappear and phase lock. When the coupling strength approaches unity the coupled lasers behave as a single long cavity with correspondingly denser longitudinal modes. Finally, we show that the gradual increase in phase locking as a function of the coupling strength results from competition between phase-locked and non-phase-locked longitudinal modes.
Optics Express | 2010
Moti Fridman; Micha Nixon; Eran Grinvald; Nir Davidson; Asher A. Friesem
A configuration for real-time measurement of unique, space-variant, polarizations is presented. The experimental results reveal that the full state of polarization at each location within the beam can be accurately obtained every 10 msec, limited only by the camera frame rate. We also present a more compact configuration which can be modified to determine the real-time wavelength variant polarization measurements.
Optics Letters | 2009
Micha Nixon; Moti Fridman; Eitan Ronen; Asher A. Friesem; Nir Davidson
Two coupled fiber laser arrangements demonstrating isochronal and achronal phase locking with long-time-delayed coupling are presented. Experimental results show that stable phase locking with coupling delay lines as long as 4 km can be obtained and that phase locking can be invariant to the time delay.
Optics Express | 2015
Ronen Chriki; Micha Nixon; Vishwa Pal; Chene Tradonsky; Gilad Barach; Asher A. Friesem; Nir Davidson
An efficient method for controlling the spatial coherence has previously been demonstrated in a modified degenerate cavity laser. There, the degree of spatial coherence was controlled by changing the size of a circular aperture mask placed inside the cavity. In this paper, we extend the method and perform general manipulation of the spatial coherence properties of the laser, by resorting to more sophisticated intra-cavity masks. As predicted from the Van Cittert Zernike theorem, the spatial coherence is shown to depend on the geometry of the masks. This is demonstrated with different mask geometries: a variable slit which enables independent control of spatial coherence properties in one coordinate axis without affecting those in the other; a double aperture, an annular ring and a circular aperture array which generate spatial coherence functional forms of cosine, Bessel and comb, respectively.
Optics Letters | 2008
Eitan Ronen; Moti Fridman; Micha Nixon; A. A. Friesem; Nir Davidson
New configurations for phase locking several laser beams with intracavity polarization elements are presented. With this configuration we demonstrated efficient phase lock of up to 24 ND:YAG laser beams with only two polarization beam displacers.