To generate energetic short pulses from fiber laser oscillators in the 2-µm emission window, we here propose an alternative to the conventional methods of pulse stretching and dispersion management. We build a passively mode-locked fiber laser from anomalous single-mode fibers and utilize strong dissipative effects to delineate high and low pulse energy sections within the cavity. Whereas the main laser output delivers low-chirp sub-ps pulses with an energy up to 12 nJ, the intracavity pulse is reshaped into a ∼0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUltrafast fiber lasers constitute a flexible platform to investigate new solitary wave concepts. To surpass the low energy limitation of the conventional solitons generated in standard telecom fibers, successive breakthroughs have promoted the usage of an important frequency chirping within fiber oscillators. This lead to original solitary wave regimes such as stretched-pulse, all-normal-dispersion, and self-similar dynamics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on multi-wavelength generation through simultaneous second-order and third-order nonlinear parametric processes following cascaded stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) in silica fibers. The fiber system consists of a short standard step-index silica fiber and a microfiber tapered from it. When this system is pumped with a 130 ps laser at 1040 nm, multiple new wavelengths in the UV (340-370 nm) and green (507-547 nm) bands arise through four-wave mixing (FWM)/sum-frequency generation (SFG) from the pump and its Raman signals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe demonstrate that the dynamic mode decomposition technique can effectively reduce the amount of noise in the dispersive Fourier transform dataset and allow for finer quantitative analysis of the experimental data. We therefore show that the oscillation pattern of a soliton molecule actually results from the interplay of several elementary vibration modes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report experimental observation of subharmonic mode excitation in primary Kerr optical frequency combs generated using crystalline whispering-gallery mode resonators. We show that the subcombs can be controlled and span a single or multiple free spectral ranges around the primary comb modes. In the spatial domain, the resulting multiscale combs correspond to an amplitude modulation of intracavity roll patterns.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe implement a superlocalization method in the time domain that allows the observation of the external motion of soliton molecules in a fiber ring cavity laser with unprecedented accuracy. In particular, we demonstrate the synchronization of two oscillating soliton molecules separated by several nanoseconds, with intermolecular oscillations following the same pattern as the intramolecular motion of the individual molecules. These experimental findings indicate an interplay between the different interaction mechanisms that coexist inside the laser cavity, despite their very different characteristic ranges, timescales, strengths, and physical origins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCombining evolutionary algorithm optimization with ultrafast fiber laser technology, we report on the self-generation of stable two-soliton molecules with controllable temporal separation. A fiber laser setup including an adjustable virtual saturable absorber achieved through nonlinear polarization evolution and an intracavity pulse shaper is used to generate two-soliton molecules with a user-defined 3-8 ps internal delay.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe demonstrate that heterodyne interferometry makes it possible to accurately measure minute nonlinear phase shifts with little constraint on the propagation loss or chromatic dispersion. We apply this technique to characterize the effective nonlinearity of silicon nitride rib waveguides in the normal and anomalous dispersion regimes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigate the effects of environmental stochastic fluctuations on Kerr optical frequency combs. This spatially extended dynamical system can be accurately studied using the Lugiato-Lefever equation, and we show that when additive noise is accounted for, the correlations of the modal field fluctuations can be determined theoretically. We propose a general theory for the computation of these field fluctuations and correlations, which is successfully compared to numerical simulations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThanks to their unique optical properties Ge-Sb-S-Se-Te amorphous chalcogenide materials and compounds offer tremendous opportunities of applications, in particular in near and mid-infrared range. This spectral range is for instance of high interest for photonics or optical sensors. Using co-sputtering technique of chalcogenide compound targets in a 200 mm industrial deposition tool, we show how by modifying the amorphous structure of GeSbSSeTe chalcogenide thin films one can significantly tailor their linear and nonlinear optical properties.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMetamaterials are artificial materials made of subwavelength elementary cells that give rise to unexpected wave properties that do not exist naturally. However, these properties are generally achieved due to 3D patterning, which is hardly feasible at short wavelengths in the visible and near-infrared regions targeted by most photonic applications. To overcome this limitation, metasurfaces, which are the 2D counterparts of metamaterials, have emerged as promising platforms that are compatible with planar nanotechnologies and thus mass production, which platforms the properties of a metamaterial into a 2D sheet.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe demonstrate that extended dissipative structures in Kerr-nonlinear whispering-gallery mode resonators undergo a spatiotemporal instability, as the pumping parameters are varied. We show that the dynamics of the patterns beyond this bifurcation yield specific Kerr comb and sub-comb spectra that can be subjected to a phase of frequency-locking when optimal conditions are met. Our numerical results are found to be in agreement with experimental measurements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUltrashort optical pulses propagating in a dissipative nonlinear system can interact and bind stably, forming optical soliton molecules. Soliton molecules in ultrafast lasers are under intense research focus and present striking analogies with their matter molecules counterparts. The recent development of real-time spectral measurements allows probing the internal dynamics of an optical soliton molecule, mapping the dynamics of the pulses' relative separations and phases that constitute the relevant internal degrees of freedom of the molecule.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present an experimental characterization of the internal oscillations, vibrations, and transients of optical soliton molecules generated in a passively mode-locked thulium-doped fiber laser. We use custom linearly chirped Bragg grating filters to perform real-time spectral measurement of the ultrafast dynamics at wavelengths around 2 μm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present an experimental study of the variation of quality factor (Q-factor) of WGM resonators as a function of surface roughness. We consider mm-size whispering-gallery mode resonators manufactured with fluoride crystals, featuring Q-factors of the order of 1 billion at 1550 nm. The experimental procedure consists of repeated polishing steps, after which the surface roughness is evaluated using profilometry by white-light phase-shifting interferometry, while the Q-factors are determined using the cavity-ring-down method.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a joint theoretical and experimental investigation of the parametric seeding of a primary Kerr optical frequency comb. Electro-optic modulation sidebands matching multiple free-spectral ranges of an ultrahigh-Q millimeter-size magnesium fluoride disk resonator are used as seed signals. These seed signals interact through four-wave mixing with the spectral components of a stable primary comb and give rise to complex spectro-temporal patterns.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report the fabrication for the first time of a strontium fluoride (SrF(2)) whispering-gallery mode resonator with quality factor in excess of 1 billion. The millimeter-size disk-resonator is polished until the surface roughness decreases down to a root-mean square value of 1.2 nm, as measured with a vertical scanning profilometer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOptical Kerr frequency combs are known to be effective coherent multiwavelength sources for ultrahigh capacity fiber communications. These combs are the frequency-domain counterparts of a wide variety of spatiotemporal dissipative structures, such as cavity solitons, chaos, or Turing patterns (rolls). In this Letter, we demonstrate that Turing patterns, which correspond to the so-called primary combs in the spectral domain, are optimally coherent in the sense that for the same pump power they provide the most robust carriers for coherent data transmission in fiber communications using advanced modulation formats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
January 2015
In this article, we investigate the dynamical behavior of breathers in optoelectronic oscillators from the standpoint of mixed-mode oscillations. In the phase space, these breathers are composite oscillations that are damped to the attractive branches of an invariant manifold. Our study shows that the emergence of breather dynamics is linked to the apparition of inflection points in the phase space, and we develop an analytical framework based on the Liénard reduction form in order to provide an analytical insight into this phenomenology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigate the phase noise performance of optoelectronic oscillators when the optical energy storage elements are in the following three configurations: a high-Q whispering gallery mode resonator, an optical delay-line and a combination of both elements. The stability properties of these various optical elements are first characterized, and then systematically compared in the optical and in the microwave frequency domains. Subsequently, the spectral purity of the oscillator is theoretically and experimentally examined for each case.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExperiments and theoretical modelling yielded significant progress toward understanding of Kerr-effect induced optical frequency comb generation in microresonators. However, the simultaneous Kerr-mediated interaction of hundreds or thousands of optical comb frequencies with the same number of resonator modes leads to complicated nonlinear dynamics that are far from fully understood. An important prerequisite for modelling the comb formation process is the knowledge of phase and amplitude of the comb modes as well as the detuning from their respective microresonator modes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigate the various routes to spatiotemporal chaos in Kerr optical frequency combs, obtained through pumping an ultra-high Q-factor whispering-gallery mode resonator with a continuous-wave laser. The Lugiato-Lefever model is used to build bifurcation diagrams with regards to the parameters that are externally controllable, namely, the frequency and the power of the pumping laser. We show that the spatiotemporal chaos emerging from Turing patterns and solitons display distinctive dynamical features.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe theoretically investigate the phase locking phenomena between the spectral components of Kerr optical frequency combs in the dynamical regime of Turing patterns. We show that these Turing patterns display a particularly strong and robust phase locking, originating from a cascade of phase locked triplets which asymptotically lead to a global phase locking between the modes. The local and global phase locking relationships defining the shape of the comb are analytically determined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrowave photonics systems rely fundamentally on the interaction between microwave and optical signals. These systems are extremely promising for various areas of technology and applied science, such as aerospace and communication engineering, sensing, metrology, nonlinear photonics, and quantum optics. In this article, we present the principal techniques used in our lab to build microwave photonics systems based on ultra-high Q whispering gallery mode resonators.
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