RESUMEN
This work describes the implementation of a compact system allowing measurement of blood flow velocity using laser Doppler velocimetry in situ. The compact setup uses an optical fiber acting as an emitter and receptor of the signal. The signal is then recovered by a photodiode and processed using a spectrum analyzer. The prototype was successfully tested to measure microbead suspension and whole blood flow velocities in a fluidic chip. Fibers with hemispherical lenses with three different radius of curvature were investigated. This simple yet precise setup would enable the insertion of the fiber via a medical catheter to monitor blood flow velocity in non superficial vessels where previous reported techniques cannot be implemented.
RESUMEN
An ultra-low intensity and beatnote phase noise dual-frequency vertical-external-cavity surface-emitting laser is built at telecom wavelength. The pump laser is realized by polarization combining two single-mode fibered laser diodes in a single-mode fiber, leading to a 100% in-phase correlation of the pump noises for the two modes. The relative intensity noise is lower than -140 dB/Hz, and the beatnote phase noise is suppressed by 30 dB, getting close to the spontaneous emission limit. The role of the imperfect cancellation of the thermal effect resulting from unbalanced pumping of the two modes in the residual phase noise is evidenced.
RESUMEN
We built a 1-watt cw singly resonant optical parametric oscillator operating at an idler wavelength of 1.65 µm for application to quantum interfaces. The non resonant idler is frequency stabilized by side-fringe locking on a relatively high-finesse Fabry-Perot cavity, and the influence of intensity noise is carefully analyzed. A relative linewidth down to the sub-kHz level (about 30 Hz over 2 s) is achieved. A very good long term stability is obtained for both frequency and intensity.