Patents by Inventor Gilles Feugnet
Gilles Feugnet 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).
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Publication number: 20100123901Abstract: The general field of the invention is that of gyrolasers comprising at least one ring-shaped optical cavity comprising at least three mirrors, a solid state amplifying medium pumped by a laser diode whose optical emission power is determined by a current supply source, the cavity and the amplifying medium being such that two so-called contra-rotating optical modes propagate in opposite directions to each other within the said optical cavity, the gyrolaser being a class B gyrolaser, the gyrolaser also comprising means of measuring the difference in optical frequency existing between the two optical modes. The gyrolaser comprises means of measuring the total optical power circulating in the optical cavity and first means of control of the current delivered by the supply source in such a way as to maintain the total optical power substantially constant in a narrow spectral band centred on the relaxation frequency of the laser.Type: ApplicationFiled: November 12, 2009Publication date: May 20, 2010Applicant: ThalesInventors: Sylvain Schwartz, Gilles Feugnet, Francois Gutty, Etienne Bonnaudet, Mehdi Alouini, Jean-Paul Pocholle
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Patent number: 7710575Abstract: The field of the invention is that of solid-state laser gyros used in inertial control units. However, there are certain technical difficulties in producing laser gyros of this type that are due partly to the fact that the counterpropagating waves interfere with each other in the amplifying medium. A laser gyro according to the invention comprises at least one solid-state amplifying medium and an optical ring cavity comprising first optical means for imposing a first linear polarization state common to the two counterpropagating optical waves at the entrance and exit of the zone containing the amplifying medium and second optical means for imposing, within the amplifying medium, a second linear polarization state on the first optical wave and a third linear polarization state on the second optical wave, these polarization states being perpendicular. Thus, all the drawbacks associated with interference are eliminated.Type: GrantFiled: December 7, 2006Date of Patent: May 4, 2010Assignee: ThalesInventors: Sylvain Schwartz, Gilles Feugnet, Jean-Paul Pocholle, Augustin Mignot, Bastien Steinhausser
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Patent number: 7663763Abstract: A laser gyro includes a semiconductor medium and assembled discrete elements, thus offering the possibility of producing large cavities for achieving the desired precision. More precisely, the laser gyro includes an optical ring cavity and a semiconductor amplifying medium with an external cavity having a vertical structure. The semiconductor amplifying medium which is used in reflection includes a stack of plane gain regions that are mutually parallel, and the dimensions of the cavity being substantially are larger than those of the amplifying medium.Type: GrantFiled: October 26, 2005Date of Patent: February 16, 2010Assignee: ThalesInventors: Gilles Feugnet, Jean-Paul Pocholle, Sylvain Schwartz
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Patent number: 7589841Abstract: The field of the invention is that of solid-state ring lasers or laser gyros. The laser gyro according to the invention comprises at least one optical cavity in the form of a ring and a solid-state amplifying medium which are designed so that two counterpropagating optical modes can propagate in opposite directions one with respect to the other inside said optical cavity and pass through the amplifying medium, said amplifying medium being coupled to an electromechanical device imparting on said amplifying medium a periodic translational movement along an axis substantially parallel to the direction of propagation of said optical modes. Thus, the population inversion grating, written by the standing wave into the amplifying medium, which disturbs the nominal operation of the laser gyro, is greatly attenuated.Type: GrantFiled: August 17, 2007Date of Patent: September 15, 2009Assignee: ThalesInventors: Sylvain Schwartz, François Gutty, Jean-Paul Pocholle, Gilles Feugnet
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Patent number: 7561275Abstract: A laser cavity optical architecture of a solid-state laser gyro measures rotational velocity or angular position and is based on a global conservation of the scale factor so that each parameter varies with temperature and avoids optical mode hops.Type: GrantFiled: October 6, 2005Date of Patent: July 14, 2009Assignee: ThalesInventors: Gilles Feugnet, Sylvain Schwartz, Jean-Paul Pocholle, Christian Larat, Francois Gutty
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Patent number: 7548572Abstract: The field of the invention is that of solid-state laser gyros. One of the major problems inherent in this technology is that the optical cavity of this type of laser is by its nature highly unstable. To reduce this instability, the invention proposes to introduce controlled optical losses into the cavity that depend on the polarization direction by placing in the cavity an optical assembly comprising a polarizing element, a first element exhibiting a reciprocal effect that acts on the polarization of the wave and a second element exhibiting a nonreciprocal effect that also acts on the polarization of the wave, at least one of these two effects being variable, and to electronically slave these losses to the difference in intensity between the counterpropagating modes. Several devices are described that implement either fixed reciprocal effects combined with variable nonreciprocal effects, or vice versa.Type: GrantFiled: March 23, 2004Date of Patent: June 16, 2009Assignee: ThalesInventors: Sylvain Schwartz, Gilles Feugnet, Jean-Paul Pocholles
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Publication number: 20090116031Abstract: The field of the invention is that of solid-state laser gyros used in inertial control units. However, there are certain technical difficulties in producing laser gyros of this type that are due partly to the fact that the counterpropagating waves interfere with each other in the amplifying medium. A laser gyro according to the invention comprises at least one solid-state amplifying medium and an optical ring cavity comprising first optical means for imposing a first linear polarization state common to the two counterpropagating optical waves at the entrance and exit of the zone containing the amplifying medium and second optical means for imposing, within the amplifying medium, a second linear polarization state on the first optical wave and a third linear polarization state on the second optical wave, these polarization states being perpendicular. Thus, all the drawbacks associated with interference are eliminated.Type: ApplicationFiled: December 7, 2006Publication date: May 7, 2009Applicant: ThalesInventors: Sylvain Schwartz, Gilles Feugnet, Jean-Paul Pocholle, Augustin Mignot, Bastien Steinhausser
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Publication number: 20090073452Abstract: The field of the invention is that of solid-state laser gyros used in particular in inertia control systems. This type of equipment is used for example for aeronautical applications. It is possible to produce a solid-state laser gyro from optically or electrically pumped semiconductor media. Currently laser gyros of the latter type are monolithic and small in size. They do not make it possible, on the one hand, to achieve the precision comparable to that of gas laser gyros and, on the other hand, to implement optical methods for eliminating frequency coupling at low rotation speeds or temperature drifts. One subject of the invention is a solid-state laser gyro comprising a semiconductor medium and consisting of assembled discrete elements, thus offering the possibility of producing large cavities for achieving the desired precision.Type: ApplicationFiled: October 26, 2005Publication date: March 19, 2009Applicant: THALESInventors: Gilles Feugnet, Jean-Paul Pocholle, Sylvain Schwartz
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Patent number: 7474406Abstract: The field of the invention is that of solid-state laser gyros. One of the major inherent problems in this technology is that the optical emission of this type of laser is by nature highly unstable in terms of power. To reduce this instability, the invention proposes to introduce, into the cavity, optical gains controlled by the installation of an optical assembly comprising an anisotropic lasing medium, a first optical element and a second optical element exhibiting a nonreciprocal effect, each acting on the polarization of the counterpropagating optical modes, at least one of these two effects being variable, thus making it possible to introduce controlled optical gains that depend on the propagation direction of the counterpropagating optical modes. Several devices are described and employ either fixed effects of the element that are combined with variable nonreciprocal effects, or the reverse. These devices apply in particular to monolithic-cavity lasers.Type: GrantFiled: November 23, 2004Date of Patent: January 6, 2009Assignee: ThalesInventors: Gilles Feugnet, Jean-Paul Pocholle, Sylvain Schwartz
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Patent number: 7446879Abstract: The field of the invention is that of solid-state laser gyros. One of the major problems inherent in this technology is that the optical cavity of this type of laser gyro is by nature highly unstable. To reduce this instability, controlled optical are introduced into the cavity that depend on the direction of propagation by using acoustooptic devices. Several devices are described, employing different configurations of acoustooptic devices. These devices apply in particular to laser gyros having monolithic cavities, and in particular to neodymium-doped YAG laser gyros.Type: GrantFiled: April 28, 2004Date of Patent: November 4, 2008Assignee: ThalesInventors: Gilles Feugnet, Didier Rolly, Jean-Paul Pocholle
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Publication number: 20080043225Abstract: The field of the invention is that of solid-state ring lasers or laser gyros. The laser gyro according to the invention comprises at least one optical cavity in the form of a ring and a solid-state amplifying medium which are designed so that two counterpropagating optical modes can propagate in opposite directions one with respect to the other inside said optical cavity and pass through the amplifying medium, said amplifying medium being coupled to an electromechanical device imparting on said amplifying medium a periodic translational movement along an axis substantially parallel to the direction of propagation of said optical modes. Thus, the population inversion grating, written by the standing wave into the amplifying medium, which disturbs the nominal operation of the laser gyro, is greatly attenuated.Type: ApplicationFiled: August 17, 2007Publication date: February 21, 2008Applicant: ThalesInventors: Sylvain SCHWARTZ, Francois Gutty, Jean-Paul Pocholle, Gilles Feugnet
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Publication number: 20080037026Abstract: The field of the invention is that of solid-state laser gyros used for measuring rotational velocities or angular positions. This type of equipment is used in particular for aeronautical applications. The performance of a laser gyro depends on the temperature stability of its scale factor S which equals 4A/?·L, L and A being respectively the optical length and the area of the laser cavity and ? the average wavelength of laser emission with no Sagnac effect. Conventionally, in gas lasers, each parameter of the scale factor is chosen so as to be independent of temperature. In solid-state lasers which are of a very different nature to that of gas lasers, it is not possible to do this. The invention proposes a laser cavity optical architecture based on the global conservation of the scale factor, it being possible for each parameter to vary with temperature. It also proposes an architecture that makes it possible at the same time to avoid optical mode hops.Type: ApplicationFiled: October 6, 2005Publication date: February 14, 2008Applicant: THALESInventors: Gilles Feugnet, Sylvain Schwartz, Jean-Paul Pocholle, Christian Larat, Francois Gutty
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Patent number: 7319513Abstract: The invention concerns solid-state gyrolasers used to measure rotation speeds or relative angular positions. This type of equipment is used, in particular, in aeronautical applications. The purpose of the invention is to complete the optic devices required to control the instability of lasers, using specific optic devices that eliminate the blind region. In this way, a “fully optic” solid-state laser is obtained, without moving parts, stable, and without blind regions. These devices comprise in particular reciprocal and nonreciprocal optical rotators, arranged so that two counter-propagating optical modes travel in the cavity at sufficiently different frequencies to avoid mode locking.Type: GrantFiled: March 16, 2005Date of Patent: January 15, 2008Assignee: ThalesInventors: Sylvain Schwartz, Gilles Feugnet, Jean-Paul Pocholle
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Publication number: 20070223001Abstract: The field of the invention is that of solid-state laser gyros. One of the major inherent problems in this technology is that the optical emission of this type of laser is by nature highly unstable in terms of power. To reduce this instability, the invention proposes to introduce, into the cavity, optical gains controlled by the installation of an optical assembly comprising an anisotropic lasing medium, a first optical element and a second optical element exhibiting a nonreciprocal effect, each acting on the polarization of the counterpropagating optical modes, at least one of these two effects being variable, thus making it possible to introduce controlled optical gains that depend on the propagation direction of the counterpropagating optical modes. Several devices are described and employ either fixed effects of the element that are combined with variable nonreciprocal effects, or the reverse. These devices apply in particular to monolithic-cavity lasers.Type: ApplicationFiled: November 23, 2004Publication date: September 27, 2007Inventors: Gilles Feugnet, Jean-Paul Pocholle, Sylvain Schwartz
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Patent number: 7230686Abstract: The invention concerns solid-state gyrolasers used to measure rotation speeds or relative angular positions. This type of equipment is used, in particular, in aeronautical applications. The purpose of the invention is to complete the optic devices required to control the instability of ring-shaped solid-state lasers using specific optic devices that eliminate the blind region without adding a measurement bias. In this way, a “fully optic” solid-state laser is obtained, without moving parts, stable, and without blind region. These devices comprise in particular polarization separation optical devices, reciprocal and nonreciprocal optical rotators arranged so that four linearly polarized optical modes travel in the cavity at sufficiently different frequencies to avoid mode locking.Type: GrantFiled: March 16, 2005Date of Patent: June 12, 2007Assignee: ThalesInventors: Sylvain Schwartz, Gilles Feugnet, Jean-Paul Pocholle
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Publication number: 20060285118Abstract: The field of the invention is that of solid-state laser gyros. One of the major problems inherent in this technology is that the optical cavity of this type of laser gyro is by nature highly unstable. To reduce this instability, the invention proposes to introduce, into the cavity, controlled optical losses that depend on the direction of propagation by using acoustooptic devices. Several devices are described, employing different configurations of acoustooptic devices. These devices apply in particular to laser gyros having monolithic cavities, and in particular to neodymium-doped YAG laser gyros.Type: ApplicationFiled: April 28, 2004Publication date: December 21, 2006Applicant: THALESInventors: Gilles Feugnet, Didier Rolly, Jean-Paul Pocholle
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Publication number: 20060256828Abstract: The field of the invention is that of solid-state laser gyros. One of the major problems inherent in this technology is that the optical cavity of this type of laser is by its nature highly unstable. To reduce this instability, the invention proposes to introduce controlled optical losses into the cavity that depend on the polarization direction by placing in the cavity an optical assembly comprising a polarizing element, a first element exhibiting a reciprocal effect that acts on the polarization of the wave and a second element exhibiting a nonreciprocal effect that also acts on the polarization of the wave, at least one of these two effects being variable, and to electronically slave these losses to the difference in intensity between the counterpropagating modes. Several devices are described that implement either fixed reciprocal effects combined with variable nonreciprocal effects, or vice versa.Type: ApplicationFiled: March 23, 2004Publication date: November 16, 2006Applicant: THALESInventors: Sylvain Schwartz, Gilles Feugnet, Jean-Paul Pocholles
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Publication number: 20060176927Abstract: The invention concerns solid-state gyrolasers used to measure rotation speeds or relative angular positions. This type of equipment is used, in particular, in aeronautical applications. The purpose of the invention is to complete the optic devices required to control the instability of lasers, using specific optic devices that eliminate the blind region. In this way, a “fully optic” solid-state laser is obtained, without moving parts, stable, and without blind regions. These devices comprise in particular reciprocal and nonreciprocal optical rotators, arranged so that two counter-propagating optical modes travel in the cavity at sufficiently different frequencies to avoid mode locking.Type: ApplicationFiled: March 16, 2005Publication date: August 10, 2006Inventors: Sylvain Schwartz, Gilles Feugnet, Jean-Paul Pocholle
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Patent number: 6961360Abstract: A longitudinally pumped laser including one or more active lasing media arranged in an optical laser cavity and at least one pumping device emitting at least one pumping beam toward the at least one active lasing medium. The pumped beam or beams is coupled with the active medium. At least one of the active lasing media includes one or more non-homogeneously doped zones, and the dimension of the doped zones and/or the distribution of the dopants is chosen on the basis of the desired transverse mode of the laser cavity. Such a laser can be used as an amplifier.Type: GrantFiled: June 12, 2001Date of Patent: November 1, 2005Assignee: ThalesInventors: Gilles Feugnet, Eric L Allier, Christian L Arat, Jean-Paul Pocholle, Didier Rolly
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Publication number: 20020122448Abstract: Longitudinally pumped laser comprising one or more active lasing media arranged in an optical cavity and at least one pumping means (4) emitting at least one pumping beam toward the active lasing medium or media (3), means (5) for the coupling of the pumped beam or beams with the active medium, characterized in that at least one of the active lasing media comprises one or more non-homogeneously doped zones (8) and in that the dimension of said doped zones (8) and/or the distribution of the dopants is chosen on the basis of the desired transverse mode of the laser cavity.Type: ApplicationFiled: February 28, 2002Publication date: September 5, 2002Inventors: Gilles Feugnet, Eric L Allier, Christian L Arat, Jean-Paul Pocholle, Didier Rolly