Fiber modal noise mitigation by a rotating double scrambler
Gert Raskin, Jacob Pember, Dmytro Rogozin, Christian Schwab, David, Coutts

TL;DR
This paper introduces a rotating double scrambler device to effectively reduce fiber modal noise in high-resolution spectroscopy, especially beneficial for systems with limited modes where traditional agitation methods are ineffective.
Contribution
The paper proposes a novel rotating double scrambler approach to mitigate modal noise, providing an alternative to fiber agitation that avoids fiber stress and damage.
Findings
Prototype design demonstrated effective modal noise reduction.
Rotating scrambler achieves continuous mode variation and averaging.
Preliminary lab results show promising noise mitigation performance.
Abstract
Fiber modal noise is a performance limiting factor in high-resolution spectroscopy, both with respect to achieving high signal-to-noise ratios or when targeting high-precision radial velocity measurements, with multi-mode fiber-fed high-resolution spectrographs. Traditionally, modal noise is reduced by agitating or "shaking" the fiber. This way, the light propagating in the fiber is redistributed over many different modes. However, in case of fibers with only a limited number of modes, e.g. at near-infrared wavelengths or in adaptive-optics assisted systems, this method becomes very inefficient. The strong agitation that would be needed stresses the fiber and could lead to focal ratio degradation, or worse, to damaging the fiber. As an alternative approach, we propose to make use of a classic optical double scrambler, a device that is already implemented in many high-precision…
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