Understanding and suppressing backscatter in optical resonators
Matt Jaffe, Lukas Palm, Claire Baum, Lavanya Taneja, Aishwarya Kumar,, Jonathan Simon

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a million-fold suppression of backreflections in optical cavities by analyzing and minimizing contributions from polarization, mode envelope, and spatial mode profile, enabling optics integration within high-finesse cavities.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive quantitative analysis of backscatter sources and introduces methods to minimize backreflections, achieving near-perfect suppression levels.
Findings
Backreflections reduced to below part-per-billion levels.
Orbital angular momentum beams experience up to 10^4 times additional suppression.
Potential application in improving laser gyroscope sensitivity.
Abstract
Optical cavities have found widespread use in interfacing to quantum emitters. Concerns about backreflection and resulting loss, however, have largely prevented the placement of optics such as lenses or modulators within high-finesse cavities. In this work, we demonstrate a million-fold suppression of backreflections from lenses within a twisted optical cavity. We achieve this by quantitatively exploring backscatter in Fabry-P\'erot resonators, separating the effect into three physical sectors: polarization, mode envelope and spatial mode profile. We describe the impact of each of these sectors, and demonstrate how to minimize backreflections within each. This culminates in measured effective reflectivities below the part-per-billion level for the fundamental mode. Additionally, we show that beams carrying orbital angular momentum experience up to times additional suppression,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Optical Sensing Technologies · Acoustic Wave Resonator Technologies · Semiconductor Lasers and Optical Devices
