Patents by Inventor Paul H. Pax
Paul H. Pax has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).
-
Patent number: 10033148Abstract: Rare earth doped fiber lasers can be robust and efficient sources of high quality light, but are usually limited to the highest gain transitions of the active species. But rare earths typically possess a multitude of potentially useful transitions that might be accessed if the dominant transition can be suppressed. In fiber lasers this suppression is complicated by the very high net gain the dominant transitions exhibit; effective suppression requires some mechanism distributed along the length of the fiber. We have developed a novel waveguide with resonant leakage elements that frustrate guidance at well-defined and selectable wavelengths. Based on this waveguide, we have fabricated a Large Mode Area Neodymium doped fiber with suppression of the four-level transition around 1060 nm, and demonstrated lasing on the three-level transition at 930 nm with good efficiency.Type: GrantFiled: October 7, 2016Date of Patent: July 24, 2018Assignee: Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLCInventors: Paul H Pax, Graham S Allen, Jay W Dawson, Derrek Reginald Drachenberg, Victor V Khitrov, Michael J Messerly, Nick Schenkel
-
Publication number: 20180045544Abstract: A system for aerially surveying an area where a plane may have crashed in water and locating pings from the plane's black box using a laser on an aerial platform that produces laser pulses; using a launch telescope to direct the laser pulses to the water producing scattering from the laser pulses and a continuous stream of backscatter; using a receiving telescope to collect the continuous stream of backscatter; using an interferometer operatively connected to the receiving telescope to produce two outputs, wherein one output is the continuous stream of backscatter, and wherein the other output is a delayed replica of the first output; and using a data collection and analysis unit operatively connected to the interferometer to produce a measurement of the sound.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 7, 2016Publication date: February 15, 2018Inventors: Jay W. Dawson, Graham S. Allen, Michael R. Carter, John E. Heebner, Michael J. Messerly, Paul H. Pax, Alexander M. Rubenchik
-
Publication number: 20170229834Abstract: Rare earth doped fiber lasers can be robust and efficient sources of high quality light, but are usually limited to the highest gain transitions of the active species. But rare earths typically possess a multitude of potentially useful transitions that might be accessed if the dominant transition can be suppressed. In fiber lasers this suppression is complicated by the very high net gain the dominant transitions exhibit; effective suppression requires some mechanism distributed along the length of the fiber. We have developed a novel waveguide with resonant leakage elements that frustrate guidance at well-defined and selectable wavelengths. Based on this waveguide, we have fabricated a Large Mode Area Neodymium doped fiber with suppression of the four-level transition around 1060 nm, and demonstrated lasing on the three-level transition at 930 nm with good efficiency.Type: ApplicationFiled: October 7, 2016Publication date: August 10, 2017Applicant: Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLCInventors: Paul H. Pax, Graham S. Allen, Jay W. Dawson, Derrek Reginald Drachenberg, Victor V. Khitrov, Michael J. Messerly, Nick Schenkel
-
Publication number: 20170229838Abstract: An Nd3+ optical fiber laser and amplifier operating in the wavelength range from 1300 to 1450 nm is described. The fiber includes a rare earth doped optical amplifier or laser operating within this wavelength band is based upon an optical fiber that guides light in this wavelength band. The waveguide structure attenuates light in the wavelength range from 850 nm to 950 nm and from 1050 nm to 1150 nm.Type: ApplicationFiled: October 7, 2016Publication date: August 10, 2017Applicant: Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLCInventors: Jay W. Dawson, Graham S. Allen, Derrek Reginald Drachenberg, Victor V. Khitrov, Michael J. Messerly, Paul H. Pax, Nick Schenkel
-
Patent number: 9450373Abstract: Cladding-pumped Raman fiber lasers and amplifiers provide high-efficiency conversion efficiency at high brightness enhancement. Differential loss is applied to both single-pass configurations appropriate for pulsed amplification and laser oscillator configurations applied to high average power cw source generation.Type: GrantFiled: March 5, 2010Date of Patent: September 20, 2016Assignee: Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLCInventors: John E. Heebner, Arun K. Sridharan, Jay Walter Dawson, Michael J. Messerly, Paul H. Pax
-
Patent number: 9373928Abstract: Spatial mode conversion modules are described, with the capability of efficiently transforming a given optical beam profile, at one plane in space into another well-defined optical beam profile at a different plane in space, whose detailed spatial features and symmetry properties can, in general, differ significantly. The modules are comprised of passive, high-efficiency, low-loss diffractive optical elements, combined with Fourier transform optics. Design rules are described that employ phase retrieval techniques and associated algorithms to determine the necessary profiles of the diffractive optical components. System augmentations are described that utilize real-time adaptive optical techniques for enhanced performance as well as power scaling.Type: GrantFiled: July 10, 2015Date of Patent: June 21, 2016Assignee: Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLCInventors: Arun K. Sridharan, Paul H. Pax, John E. Heebner, Derrek R. Drachenberg, James P. Armstrong, Jay W. Dawson
-
Publication number: 20150340835Abstract: Spatial mode conversion modules are described, with the capability of efficiently transforming a given optical beam profile, at one plane in space into another well-defined optical beam profile at a different plane in space, whose detailed spatial features and symmetry properties can, in general, differ significantly. The modules are comprised of passive, high-efficiency, low-loss diffractive optical elements, combined with Fourier transform optics. Design rules are described that employ phase retrieval techniques and associated algorithms to determine the necessary profiles of the diffractive optical components. System augmentations are described that utilize real-time adaptive optical techniques for enhanced performance as well as power scaling.Type: ApplicationFiled: July 10, 2015Publication date: November 26, 2015Inventors: Arun K. Sridharan, Paul H. Pax, John E. Heebner, Derrek R. Drachenberg, James P. Armstrong, Jay W. Dawson
-
Patent number: 9172208Abstract: An optical source capable of enhanced scaling of pulse energy and brightness utilizes an ensemble of single-aperture fiber lasers as pump sources, with each such fiber laser operating at acceptable pulse energy levels. Beam combining involves stimulated Raman scattering using a Stokes' shifted seed beam, the latter of which is optimized in terms of its temporal and spectral properties. Beams from fiber lasers can thus be combined to attain pulses with peak energies in excess of the fiber laser self-focusing limit of 4 MW while retaining the advantages of a fiber laser system of high average power with good beam quality.Type: GrantFiled: February 20, 2013Date of Patent: October 27, 2015Assignee: Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLCInventors: Jay W. Dawson, Graham S. Allen, Paul H. Pax, John E. Heebner, Arun K. Sridharan, Alexander M. Rubenchik, Chrisopher B. J. Barty
-
Patent number: 9170367Abstract: Field-flattening strands may be added to and arbitrarily positioned within a field-flattening shell to create a waveguide that supports a patterned, flattened mode. Patterning does not alter the effective index or flattened nature of the mode, but does alter the characteristics of other modes. Compared to a telecom fiber, a hexagonal pattern of strands allows for a three-fold increase in the flattened mode's area without reducing the separation between its effective index and that of its bend-coupled mode. Hexagonal strand and shell elements prove to be a reasonable approximation, and, thus, to be of practical benefit vis-à-vis fabrication, to those of circular cross section. Patterned flattened modes offer a new and valuable path to power scaling.Type: GrantFiled: March 14, 2013Date of Patent: October 27, 2015Assignee: Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLCInventors: Michael J. Messerly, Paul H. Pax, Jay W. Dawson
-
Patent number: 9124066Abstract: Spatial mode conversion modules are described, with the capability of efficiently transforming a given optical beam profile, at one plane in space into another well-defined optical beam profile at a different plane in space, whose detailed spatial features and symmetry properties can, in general, differ significantly. The modules are comprised of passive, high-efficiency, low-loss diffractive optical elements, combined with Fourier transform optics. Design rules are described that employ phase retrieval techniques and associated algorithms to determine the necessary profiles of the diffractive optical components. System augmentations are described that utilize real-time adaptive optical techniques for enhanced performance as well as power scaling.Type: GrantFiled: March 8, 2013Date of Patent: September 1, 2015Assignee: Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLCInventors: Arun K. Sridharan, Paul H. Pax, John E. Heebner, Derrek R. Drachenberg, James P. Armstrong, Jay W. Dawson
-
Publication number: 20130294468Abstract: Spatial mode conversion modules are described, with the capability of efficiently transforming a given optical beam profile, at one plane in space into another well-defined optical beam profile at a different plane in space, whose detailed spatial features and symmetry properties can, in general, differ significantly. The modules are comprised of passive, high-efficiency, low-loss diffractive optical elements, combined with Fourier transform optics. Design rules are described that employ phase retrieval techniques and associated algorithms to determine the necessary profiles of the diffractive optical components. System augmentations are described that utilize real-time adaptive optical techniques for enhanced performance as well as power scaling.Type: ApplicationFiled: March 8, 2013Publication date: November 7, 2013Applicant: LAWRENCE LIVERMORE NATIONAL SECURITY, LLCInventors: Arun K. Sridharan, Paul H. Pax, John E. Heebner, Derrek R. Drachenberg, James P. Armstrong, Jay W. Dawson
-
Publication number: 20110170563Abstract: Cladding-pumped Raman fiber lasers and amplifiers provide high-efficiency conversion efficiency at high brightness enhancement. Differential loss is applied to both single-pass configurations appropriate for pulsed amplification and laser oscillator configurations applied to high average power cw source generation.Type: ApplicationFiled: March 5, 2010Publication date: July 14, 2011Inventors: John E. Heebner, Arun K. Sridharan, Jay Walter Dawson, Michael J. Messerly, Paul H. Pax
-
Patent number: 6907155Abstract: In a folded three-dimensional free-space optical switch including a set of fibers and an optical system for producing collimated beamlets aligned to intersect an array of dual axis micromirrors of coplanar input and output mirror elements, and a folding mirror, the input and output micromirrors are arranged in a pattern wherein either the input or output mirror set is disposed along an annulus and wherein the complementary output or input mirror set is disposed within the annulus in order to globally minimize maximum tilt angles for a two-dimensional locus of tilt angles of the micromirror set. The beamlets are routed from assigned input fibers to corresponding input moveable mirrors to assigned output fibers via the static folding mirror and corresponding output moveable mirrors.Type: GrantFiled: October 15, 2002Date of Patent: June 14, 2005Inventors: Bryan P. Staker, Eugene W. Campbell, Paul H. Pax
-
Publication number: 20040071393Abstract: In a folded three-dimensional free-space optical switch including a set of fibers and an optical system for producing collimated beamlets aligned to intersect an array of dual axis micromirrors of coplanar input and output mirror elements, and a folding mirror, the input and output micromirrors are arranged in a pattern wherein either the input or output mirror set is disposed along an annulus and wherein the complementary output or input mirror set is disposed within the annulus in order to globally minimize maximum tilt angles for a two-dimensional locus of tilt angles of the micromirror set. The beamlets are routed from assigned input fibers to corresponding input moveable mirrors to assigned output fibers via the static folding mirror and corresponding output moveable mirrors.Type: ApplicationFiled: October 15, 2002Publication date: April 15, 2004Applicant: Glimmerglass, Networks Inc.Inventors: Bryan P. Staker, Eugene W. Campbell, Paul H. Pax
-
Patent number: 5065407Abstract: A laser resonator that is geometrically stable by classical definition is provided with beneficial characteristics of an unstable type through the use of a novel implementation of spatial filtering. A pinhole aperture is provided as part of, or on conjunction with, a mirror at one end of the cavity to cause light reflected from the mirror to diverge as it is directed toward the other end of the cavity. A spot focus of light, as usually found in spatial filters, is not utilized. The result is a laser cavity structure which provides a large mode beam within the cavity, a good quality output beam having a smoothly varying intensity distribution across it and which is easy to align.Type: GrantFiled: April 12, 1990Date of Patent: November 12, 1991Assignee: Continuum Electro-Optics, Inc.Inventor: Paul H. Pax
-
Patent number: 4751712Abstract: A dye laser system especially useful for generating short pulses in response to excitation laser pulses directed to an appropriate dye contained between opposing mirrors that form a short cavity within a small, easily replaceable cell. The spacing of the mirrors is adjustable by application of a force from outside of the cell, thereby allowing control of the frequency of the laser output. The cell is self-contained, including a dye reservoir maintained in continuous liquid communication with the cavity for providing fresh dye to it.Type: GrantFiled: August 22, 1986Date of Patent: June 14, 1988Assignee: Quantel InternationalInventors: Paul H. Pax, Pay H. Chiu, H. Laurance Marshall, James Henden