home
products
technology
news
about
contact
careers
 
 
 
 Videos:    

 Fiber Swept Laser Demo <Link>

 
 Articles:    

Endoscopic 3D-OCT imaging with FDML.
  • Nature Photonics, (June 2007)
  • Desmond Adler  and James Fujimoto

Fourier Domain Mode Locking at 1050 nm for ultrahigh-speed Optical Coherence Tomography of the human retina at 236,000 axial scans per second

  • Optics Letters, (May 2007)
  • Robert Huber, Desmond Adler, Vivek Srinivasan, and James Fujimoto

 

Swept source optical coherence microscopy using a Fourier domain mode-locked laser  

  • Optics Express, Vol. 15, Issue 10, pp. 6210-6217 (May 2007)
  • Shu-Wei Huang, Aaron D. Aguirre, Robert A. Huber, Desmond C. Adler, James G. Fujimoto

 

Ultrahigh-speed optical coherence tomography imaging and visualization of the embryonic avian heart using a buffered Fourier Domain Mode Locked laser 

  • Optics Express, Vol. 15, Issue 10, pp. 6251-6267 (May 2007)

  • M. W. Jenkins, D. C. Adler, M. Gargesha, R. Huber, F. Rothenberg, J. Belding, M. Watanabe, D. L. Wilson, J. G. Fujimoto, A. M. Rollins

Phase-sensitive optical coherence tomography at up to 370,000 lines per second using buffered Fourier domain mode-locked lasers 

  • Optics Letters, Vol. 32, Issue 6, pp. 626-628 (March 2007)
  • Desmond C. Adler, Robert Huber, James G. Fujimoto

 

Fourier domain mode-locked (FDML) lasers at 1050 nm and 202,000 sweeps per second for OCT retinal imaging

  • Proc. SPIE 6429, 642907 (Feb 2007)
  • Robert Huber, Desmond C. Adler, Vivek J. Srinivasan, Iwona M. Gorczynska, and James G. Fujimoto

 

Phase-sensitive optical coherence tomography using buffered Fourier domain mode-locked lasers at up to 370,000 scans per second

  • Proc. SPIE 6429, 64291L (Feb 2007)
  • Robert Huber, Desmond C. Adler, and James G. Fujimoto

 

Fourier Domain Mode Locking (FDML) by Dr. Robert Huber <Link>

High-speed wavelength-swept lasers by Kevin Hsu, <Link>

Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) by Wikipedia <Link>

Fiber Fabry-Perot (FFP) Tunable Filter by Micron Optics <Link>