ABSTRACT
We have developed an ultra-low noise tunable Brillouin fiber laser exhibiting three orders of magnitude better frequency noise performance than the Neodymium-doped fiber laser pump and remarkable optical signal-to-noise ratio exceeding 80â dB suitable for immediate applications in coherent nonlinear conversion, quantum computing and underwater communications. In addition, we have implemented a custom optical phase-locked loop to ensure long-term stable operation and have investigated its impact on frequency noise. We demonstrate the power scalability of the single frequency (Hz-class) Brillouin laser, delivering over 500â mW with tunability across the 900â nm to 930â nm range in an all-fiber fully polarization-maintaining architecture.
ABSTRACT
We report here on the development of a multi-Watt power tunable single frequency ultra-low noise laser system emitting around 620 nm. More than 5 W of output power is obtained between 616.5 nm and 630.8 nm using sum frequency generation of 1050 nm and 1550 nm tunable laser sources in a periodic poled lithium niobate crystal. The tunability is achieved through temperature and channel shift, and only limited by the crystal characteristics. An output power of 10.1 W and an optical-optical efficiency of 45% are reached at 624.5 nm. The relative intensity noise properties of the conversion process have been experimentally investigated in different configurations showing excellent agreement with the analytical prediction.
ABSTRACT
We utilize adaptive optimization to enhance the spectral broadening of an amplified electro-optic frequency comb with a 25 GHz repetition rate in a highly nonlinear fiber and subsequently generate sub-picosecond pulses. The spectral phase of the comb is adaptively optimized by a Fourier pulse shaper in a closed control loop with the HNLF output spectrum as the process variable to be optimized. Enhanced spectral broadening also increases the stimulated Brillouin scattering threshold allowing increased power scaling and thereby boosting the bandwidth by a factor of more than 13 times over the initial comb. System versatility to varying conditions is demonstrated by achieving consistent bandwidth enhancement (nearly or more than 100 lines) in varying operating conditions that distort the temporal profile of the comb. In all cases, the optimization yields a near transform limited pulse that enters the nonlinear fiber. Sub-picosecond pulse generation is achieved with a short length of single mode fiber post the nonlinear fiber.
ABSTRACT
We demonstrate a versatile technique to generate a broadband optical frequency comb source in the C-band. This is accomplished by nonlinear spectral broadening of a phase modulated comb source driven by dual frequency offset locked carriers. The locking is achieved by setting up a heterodyne optical frequency locked loop to lock two phase modulated electro-optic 25 GHz frequency combs sourced from individual seed carriers offset by 100 GHz, to within 6.7 MHz of each other. We realize spectral broadening in highly nonlinear fiber after suitable amplification to obtain an equalized, nonlinearly broadened frequency comb. We obtain $\sim 86 $â¼86 lines in a 20 dB band spanning over 2 THz.
ABSTRACT
A novel method for efficient generation of a high-power, equalized continuous-wave supercontinuum source in an all-conventional silica fiber architecture is demonstrated. Highly nonlinear fiber is pumped in its anomalous dispersion region using a novel, high-power, L-band laser. The L-band laser encompasses a sixth-order cascaded Raman amplifier which is pumped with a high-power Ytterbium-doped fiber laser and amplifies a low-power, tunable L-band seed source. The supercontinuum generated 35 W of power with â¼40% efficiency. The supercontinuum spectrum was measured to have a high degree of flatness of better than 5 dB over 400 nm of bandwidth (1.3-1.7 µm, limited by spectrum analyzer range) and a power spectral density in this region of >50 mW/nm. The extent of the SC spectrum is estimated to be up to 2 µm.
ABSTRACT
We demonstrate a simple module for octave spanning continuous-wave supercontinuum generation using standard telecom fiber. This module can accept any high power ytterbium-doped fiber laser as input. The input light is transferred into the anomalous dispersion region of the telecom fiber through a cascade of Raman shifts. A recently proposed Raman laser architecture with distributed feedback efficiently performs these Raman conversions. A spectrum spanning over 1000nm (>1 octave) from 880 to 1900nm is demonstrated. The average power from the supercontinuum is ~34W with a high conversion efficiency of 44%. Input wavelength agility is demonstrated with similar supercontinua over a wide input wavelength range.