Wavefront and caustic surfaces of refractive laser beam shaper
David L. Shealy, John A. Hoffnagle
SPIE Optical Engineering + Applications 2007
A system of two aspheric lenses is described, which efficiently converts a collimated Gaussian beam to a flattop beam. Departing from earlier designs, both aspheric surfaces were convex, simplifying their fabrication; the output beam was designed with a continuous roll-off, allowing control of the far-field diffraction pattern; and diffraction from the entrance and exit apertures was held to a negligible level. The design principles are discussed in detail, and the performance of the as-built optics is compared quantitatively with the theoretical design. Approximately 78% of the incident power is enclosed in a region with 5% rms power variation. The 8-mm-diameter beam propagates approximately 0.5 m without significant change in the intensity profile; when the beam is expanded to 32 mm in diameter, this range increases to several meters. © 2000 Optical Society of America.
David L. Shealy, John A. Hoffnagle
SPIE Optical Engineering + Applications 2007
John A. Hoffnagle, C. Michael Jefferson
SPIE Optical Science and Technology 2001
Rik Harbers, John A. Hoffnagle, et al.
Applied Physics Letters
George Nemeş, John A. Hoffnagle
SPIE Optics + Photonics 2006