Thank you for the comment. Let me say that I envy your present situation where you are working with several different lasers and investigating various questions. I made a joke about your Holmium jet because of this freedom.
Those images are about one year old and I have been working on this laser exclusively during this time. I did not make a video of that original version because I never reached what I considered a definitive point of completion. I have made so many changes it is hard to remember them without my log book.
1. The laser in the image was externally triggered, produced up to 10 J in a 50usec pulse, was limited by the xenon lamps' voltage hold off to 2800V and approximately 1000J input. At maximum power the divergence was 30mrad.
2. A thyratron and then a spark gap replaced the external trigger and allowed additional power to be sent to the lamps. This increased the pulse duration to 60 usec due to the additional inductance and the power then plateaued at 20J and the divergence increased further to 40mrad. Additional input energy only increased the pulse duration.
3. Several different lamps were tried. First two then 6 and then again two, but these last two lamps were much larger, ablating wall lamps and the triggering was changed to a high voltage pulse injected parallel to the main, directly coupled, discharge circuit. The adjustable pressure in the ablating wall lamps allows the voltage stand-off to be set to match the discharge voltage and so the spark gap was removed. This last lamp configuration (the current set up) produces 12usec discharges and the laser pulse is up to 8usec long. I estimate the energy at 70J , but the calorimeter I was using to make this measurement was damaged..
The divergence is still high at 40mrad and the power output again plateaus even though I can easily increase the input beyond the 3000J where the power ceases to increase. I believe the gain is becoming so high that the highly divergent rays are simply not exiting the cavity, but develop suffecent gain to lase into the pump chamber. By lowering the dye concentration in order to lower the gain I can demonstrate that the lamps can continue to produce more light and more laser energy beyond 3000J input.
I have tried several unstable cavities that are reported to significantly reduce divergence. The simplest was a positive branch confocal resonator with a magnification of two and out coupling via an annular scraper mirror immediately in front of the convex, high reflector. I am also going to try to modify the pump chamber to a non-imaging parabolic concentrator to allow me to reduce the cell diameter from it's current 21mm to a significantly lower cross section. This looks promising as it will allow higher dye concentrations as well.


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