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1.
Biomed Opt Express ; 15(3): 1553-1570, 2024 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38495728

ABSTRACT

We have developed a direct frequency comb spectroscopy instrument, which we have tested on Saccharomyces cerevisiae (baker's yeast) by measuring its CO2 output and production rate as we varied the environmental conditions, including the amount and type of feed sugar, the temperature, and the amount of yeast. By feeding isotopically-enhanced sugar to the yeast, we demonstrate the capability of our device to differentiate between two isotopologues of CO2, with a concentration measurement precision of 260 ppm for 12C16O2 and 175 ppm for 13C16O2. We also demonstrate the ability of our spectrometer to measure the proportion of carbon in the feed sugar converted to CO2, and estimate the amount incorporated into the yeast biomass.

2.
J Chem Phys ; 160(10)2024 Mar 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38477338

ABSTRACT

We demonstrate massively parallel spectroscopic measurements of 12C2H2 using an optical frequency comb. This allows for the rapid and simultaneous estimation of self-broadening and self-shifting of more than 50 optical transitions between 1512 and 1538 nm. The use of a temperature-controlled sealed gas cell allows us to measure both pressure- and temperature-mediated broadening and shifting. We present the results for the pressure-mediated self-broadening and self-shifting coefficients for 59 optical lines that make up the v1 + v3 combination band and a selection of hot bands. Our ability to measure the broadening of numerous transitions allows for the confirmation of prior work that shows that there is no measurable vibrational dependence across all acetylene bands, despite the strong dependence of the broadening coefficient on the rotational number. We also present an extensive measurement of the temperature dependence of the self-broadening for each of these 59 lines. This work shows the revolutionary power afforded by the frequency combs for rapid generation of large datasets related to thermodynamic variations of the key spectroscopic parameters of important gases.

3.
Opt Express ; 30(18): 31752-31765, 2022 Aug 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36242251

ABSTRACT

Atomic vapour magnetometers sense the local magnetic field strength by measuring the resulting precession rate of a well-defined quantum state. An essential prerequisite for this approach is a requirement to drive the media into this quantum state, which is frequently achieved via optical pumping. In real-world alkali-metal atoms, with their multiplicity of ground states, the optical pumping process is necessarily lossy, with a large fraction of the atoms being lost to quantum states that do not contribute to the useful magnetically sensitive signal. This consequently reduces the sensitivity of all optically-pumped atomic sensors. Here we theoretically and experimentally study the population changes of the quantum ground states of 87Rb during optical pumping. We use this understanding to develop a repumping scheme that allows us to increase the number of atoms that are contributing to the useful magnetic sensing output. Unlike prior schemes, our approach delivers this improved sensitivity with significantly suppressed fictitious magnetic fields associated with the repumping, which would otherwise reduce the accuracy of the sensor. When operated at Earth's field strength (∼50µT), the repumped sensor shows a magnetic sensitivity of 200 fT/Hz, that is nearly three times higher than the non-repumped version.

4.
Opt Lett ; 46(19): 4972-4975, 2021 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34598246

ABSTRACT

Frequency combs play a crucial supporting role for optical clocks by allowing coherent frequency division of their output signals into the electronic domain. This task requires stabilization of the comb's offset frequency and of an optical comb mode to the clock laser. However, the two actuators used to control these quantities often influence both degrees of freedom simultaneously. This non-orthogonality leads to artificial limits to the control bandwidth and unwanted noise in the comb. Here, we orthogonalize the two feedback loops with a linear combination of the measured signals in a field-programmable gate array. We demonstrate this idea using a fiber frequency comb stabilized to a clock laser at 259 THz, half the frequency of the 1S0→3P0 Yb transition. The decrease in coupling between the loops reduces the comb's optical phase noise by 20 dB. This approach could improve the performance of any comb stabilized to any optical frequency standard.

5.
Opt Lett ; 46(2): 412-415, 2021 Jan 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33449042

ABSTRACT

In this Letter, we present Fourier-transform-limited, nanosecond scale optical pulses from a vertical cavity surface emitting laser (VCSEL) using injection locking with a narrow-band seed laser. We examine two different injection-locking architectures and show that we can achieve an effective injection-locking range of over 8 GHz with an extinction ratio of 20,000:1. These results indicate that injection-locked VCSELs could become a key component of large-scale photonic quantum networks.

6.
Opt Lett ; 41(5): 1014-7, 2016 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26974104

ABSTRACT

We describe a technique to disseminate highly stable microwave and optical signals from physically separated frequency standards to multiple locations. We demonstrate our technique by transferring the frequency stability performance of a microwave frequency reference to the repetition-rate stability of an optical frequency comb in a different location. The stabilized optical frequency comb becomes available in both locations for measurements of both optical and microwave signals. We show a microwave frequency stability of 4×10(-15) in both locations for integration times beyond 100 s. The control system uses only a standard Ethernet connection.

7.
Opt Express ; 24(4): 4088-96, 2016 Feb 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26907059

ABSTRACT

We demonstrate a scheme for coherent narrowband direct optical frequency comb spectroscopy. An extended cavity diode laser is injection locked to a single mode of an optical frequency comb, frequency shifted, and used as a local oscillator to optically down-mix the interrogating comb on a fast photodetector. The high spectral coherence of the injection lock generates a microwave frequency comb at the output of the photodiode with very narrow features, enabling spectral information to be further down-mixed to RF frequencies, allowing optical transmittance and phase to be obtained using electronics commonly found in the lab. We demonstrate two methods for achieving this step: a serial mode-by-mode approach and a parallel dual-comb approach, with the Cs D1 transition at 894 nm as a test case.

8.
Opt Express ; 24(1): 378-87, 2016 Jan 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26832268

ABSTRACT

We demonstrate the use of focused ion beam milling to machine optical structures directly into the core of microstructured optical fibers. The particular fiber used was exposed-core microstructured optical fiber, which allowed direct access to the optically guiding core. Two different designs of Fabry-Perot cavity were fabricated and optically characterized. The first cavity was formed by completely removing a section of the fiber core, while the second cavity consisted of a shallow slot milled into the core, leaving the majority of the core intact. This work highlights the possibility of machining complex optical devices directly onto the core of microstructured optical fibers using focused ion beam milling for applications including environmental, chemical, and biological sensing.

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