Laser guide star return-flux gain from frequency chirping
J. Hellemeier, M. Enderlein, M. Hager, D. Bonaccini Calia, R. L., Johnson, F. Lison, M. O. Byrd, L. A. Kann, M. Centrone, P. Hickson

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that frequency chirping of a laser guide star can increase return flux by up to 22%, with effectiveness depending on power density, and provides the first on-sky measurements confirming theoretical predictions.
Contribution
First on-sky measurement of return flux enhancement using a single-frequency chirped laser guide star, validating theoretical models and highlighting potential for high-power laser applications.
Findings
Maximum 22% flux gain at 16.5 W laser power.
Optimal chirping amplitude around 150 MHz and rate of 0.8 MHz/μs.
Flux gain depends strongly on power density and seeing conditions.
Abstract
Spectral hole burning reduces sodium laser guide star efficiency. Due to photon recoil, atoms that are initially resonant with the single-frequency laser get Doppler shifted out of resonance, which reduces the return flux. Frequency-chirped (also known as frequency-swept) continuous-wave lasers have the potential to mitigate the effect of spectral hole burning and even increase the laser guide star efficiency beyond the theoretical limit of a single-frequency laser. On-sky measurements of a frequency-chirped, single-frequency laser guide star are performed at the Roque de los Muchachos Observatory on La Palma. In the experiment, a 35-cm telescope and a fast photon counting receiver system are employed to resolve the return flux response during laser frequency sweeps gaining insights into the population dynamics of the sodium layer. At a launched laser power of 16.5 W, we find a maximum…
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