4.6 Article

Can amplified spontaneous emission produce intense laser guide stars for adaptive optics?

Journal

OPTICS LETTERS
Volume 46, Issue 8, Pages 1792-1795

Publisher

OPTICAL SOC AMER
DOI: 10.1364/OL.417910

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Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RGPIN-2019-04369]
  2. Chinese Academy of Sciences, CAS President's Fellowship Initiative [2017VMA0013]
  3. Yunnan Provincial Department of Education

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Adaptive optics is crucial for ground-based optical and infrared astronomy, offering high angular resolution and sensitivity. Systems using laser guide stars have high sky coverage potential, but are limited by return flux availability. Amplified spontaneous emission has the potential to enhance beacon intensity, but requires a thick population inversion in an electronically dense transition, with atomic oxygen and nitrogen being potential candidates.
Adaptive optics is a key technology for ground-based optical and infrared astronomy, providing high angular resolution and sensitivity. Systems employing laser guide stars can achieve high sky coverage, but their performance is limited by the available return flux. Amplified spontaneous emission could potentially boost the intensity of beacons produced by resonant excitation of atomic or molecular species in the upper atmosphere. This requires the production of a population inversion in an electronic transition that is optically thick to stimulated emission. Mesospheric metals have insufficient column density for amplified spontaneous emission, but atomic oxygen and nitrogen are potential candidates. They could potentially be excited by a high-energy chirped femtosecond pulsed laser, making visible-wavelength transitions accessible. Such lasers can also generate a white-light supercontinuum in the atmosphere. In addition to providing high intensity, the broadband emission from such a source could facilitate the sensing of the tilt component of atmospheric turbulence. (C) 2021 Optical Society of America

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