Improving the sensitivity of planar Fabry-P\'erot cavities via adaptive optics and mode filtering
Jakub Czuchnowski, Robert Prevedel

TL;DR
This paper presents a theoretical and experimental study showing that adaptive optics and mode filtering can significantly enhance the sensitivity of planar Fabry-Pérot cavities by mitigating aberration-induced mode excitation.
Contribution
It introduces a general framework for understanding mode interactions in planar Fabry-Pérot cavities and demonstrates how wavefront correction improves sensor sensitivity.
Findings
Sensitivity can be increased up to three-fold.
Zernike aberrations significantly affect sensitivity.
Wavefront correction and mode filtering effectively restore sensitivity.
Abstract
Fabry-P\'erot (FP) cavities are fundamental and ubiquitous optical elements frequently used in various sensing applications. Here, we introduce a general theoretical framework to study arbitrary light-cavity mode interactions for planar FPs and show how optical aberrations, intrinsic to the interrogating beam or due to imperfect cavities, reduce optical sensitivity by exciting higher-order spatial modes in the cavity. We find that particular Zernike aberrations play a dominant role in sensitivity degradation, and that the general loss of sensitivity can be significantly recovered by appropriate wavefront correction or mode filtering. We then demonstrate our theoretical findings also experimentally and show that in practice the sensitivity of realistic planar FP sensors can be improved up to three-fold by a synergistic combination of adaptive optics and passive mode filtering.
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