Simulation of complex phenomena in optical fibres
Jeremy Allington-Smith, Graham Murray, Ulrike Lemke

TL;DR
This paper presents a phase-tracking ray-tracing method to model focal ratio degradation and scrambling in optical fibres, including complex geometries, aiding the design of advanced fibres for precision spectroscopy.
Contribution
It introduces a practical phase-tracking ray-tracing approach to model FRD and scrambling in complex fibre geometries, extending previous experimental work.
Findings
Scrambling mainly affects near-field pattern shape, not barycentre.
FRD homogenizes near-field pattern but doesn't fully uniformize it.
Polygonal fibres improve scrambling without increasing FRD.
Abstract
Optical fibres are essential for many types of highly-multiplexed and precision spectroscopy. The success of the new generation of multifibre instruments under construction to investigate fundamental problems in cosmology, such as the nature of dark energy, requires accurate modellisation of the fibre system to achieve their signal-to-noise goals. Despite their simple construction, fibres exhibit unexpected behaviour including non-conservation of Etendue (Focal Ratio Degradation; FRD) and modal noise. Furthermore, new fibre geometries (non-circular or tapered) have become available to improve the scrambling properties that, together with modal noise, limit the achievable SNR in precision spectroscopy. These issues have often been addressed by extensive tests on candidate fibres and their terminations but these are difficult and time-consuming. Modelling by ray-tracing and wave analysis…
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