Abstract
The design and application of an uncoated sapphire plate that acts as both the beam splitter and the output coupler of an interferometric laser resonator are described. Output coupling is provided at one of the surfaces by p-polarized (TM) reflection near the Brewster angle, and axial-mode selection is enforced at the other surface by s-polarized (TE) reflection at the same angle of incidence. The design is discussed in the context of the phase-locked, rf linac free-electron laser, in which the coupling of adjacent optical pulses at the beam splitter induces temporal phase coherence among all the pulses in the output beam; this coherence is manifested in the frequency domain as a reduction in the number of axial modes per rf frequency interval. The Michelson and Fox–Smith resonator designs are compared, and applications to cavity dumping are discussed.
© 1994 Optical Society of America
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