Multicore fibre technology - the road to multimode photonics
Joss Bland-Hawthorn, Seong-Sik Min, Emma Lindley, Sergio Leon-Saval (U, Sydney), Simon Ellis, John Lawrence (AAO), Martin Roth (Leibniz Institute),, Hans-Gerd Lohmannsroben (U Potsdam), Sylvain Veilleux (U Maryland)

TL;DR
This paper discusses advancements in multicore fibre technology, highlighting the development of high-quality multicore fibres and complex photonic functions, enabling new applications in multimode photonics and astronomical instrumentation.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new Sagnac interferometer for printing complex functions into multicore fibres with over 127 cores, surpassing previous limitations of uniformity and depth of field.
Findings
Successful fabrication of high-quality multicore fibres
Implementation of a Sagnac interferometer for complex function printing
First light achieved with a 500mW laser on the new system
Abstract
For the past forty years, optical fibres have found widespread use in ground-based and space-based instruments. In most applications, these fibres are used in conjunction with conventional optics to transport light. But photonics offers a huge range of optical manipulations beyond light transport that were rarely exploited before 2001. The fundamental obstacle to the broader use of photonics is the difficulty of achieving photonic action in a multimode fibre. The first step towards a general solution was the invention of the photonic lantern (Leon-Saval, Birks & Bland-Hawthorn 2005) and the delivery of high-efficiency devices (< 1 dB loss) five years on (Noordegraaf et al 2009). Multicore fibres (MCF), used in conjunction with lanterns, are now enabling an even bigger leap towards multimode photonics. Until recently, the single-moded cores in MCFs were not sufficiently uniform to…
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