Experimental characterization of modal noise in multimode fibers for astronomical spectrometers
E. Oliva, M. Rainer, A. Tozzi, N. Sanna, M. Iuzzolino, A. Brucalassi

TL;DR
This study experimentally investigates modal noise in multimode fibers used in astronomical spectrometers, revealing its dependence on illumination conditions and limited mitigation by common scrambling techniques.
Contribution
It provides a detailed laboratory characterization of modal noise behavior in different fiber types and evaluates the effectiveness of standard scrambling methods.
Findings
Modal noise increases with under-illumination.
Optical double scramblers do not reduce modal noise.
Mechanical agitators have variable effects depending on conditions.
Abstract
Starting from our puzzling on-sky experience with the GIANO-TNG spectrometer we set up an infrared high resolution spectrometer in our laboratory and used this instrument to characterize the modal noise generated in fibers of different types (circular and octagonal) and sizes. Our experiment includes two conventional scrambling systems for fibers: a mechanical agitator and an optical double scrambler. We find that the strength of the modal noise primarily depends on how the fiber is illuminated. It dramatically increases when the fiber is under-illuminated, either in the near field or in the far field. The modal noise is similar in circular and octagonal fibers. The Fourier spectrum of the noise decreases exponentially with frequency; i.e., the modal noise is not white but favors broad spectral features. Using the optical double scrambler has no effect on modal noise. The mechanical…
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