Kerr microresonators generate interesting and useful fundamental states of electromagnetic radiation through nonlinear interactions of continuous-wave (CW) laser light. With photonic-integration techniques, functional devices with low noise, small size, low-power consumption, scalable fabrication, and heterogeneous combinations of photonics and electronics can be realized. Kerr solitons, which stably circulate in a Kerr microresonator, have emerged as a source of coherent, ultrafast pulse trains and ultra-broadband optical-frequency combs. Using the technique, Kerr combs can support carrier-envelope-offset phase stabilization to enable optical synthesis and metrology. Here, we introduce a Kerr-microresonator optical clockwork, which is a foundational device that distributes optical-clock signals to the mode-difference frequency of a comb. Our clockwork is based on a silicon-nitride (SiN) microresonator that generates a Kerr-soliton frequency comb with a repetition frequency of 1 THz. We measure our terahertz clockwork by electro-optic modulation with a microwave signal, enabling optical-based timing experiments in this wideband and high-speed frequency range. Moreover, by EO phase modulation of our entire Kerr-soliton comb, we arbitrarily generate additional CW modes between the 1-THz modes to reduce the repetition frequency and increase the resolution of the comb. Our experiments characterize the absolute frequency noise of this Kerr-microresonator clockwork to one part in 10, which is the highest accuracy and precision ever reported with this technology and opens the possibility of measuring high-performance optical clocks with Kerr combs.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/physrevx.9.031023 | DOI Listing |
Optical microresonators offer a highly-attractive new platform for the generation of optical frequency combs. Recently, several groups have been able to demonstrate the generation of dual-frequency combs in a single microresonator driven by two optical pumps. This opens the possibility for microresonator-based dual-comb systems suitable for measurement applications such as spectroscopy, ranging and imaging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoliton microresonator frequency combs (microcombs) have recently emerged as an attractive new type of optical comb source with a wide range applications proposed and demonstrated. To extend the optical bandwidth of these microresonator sources, several previous studies have proposed and studied the injection of an additional optical probe wave into the resonator. In this case, nonlinear scattering between the injected probe and the original soliton enables the formation of new comb frequencies through a phase-matched cascade of four-wave mixing processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFParametric oscillation in Kerr microresonators provides an attractive pathway for the generation of new optical frequencies in a low-power, small-footprint device. The frequency shift of the newly generated parametric sidebands is set by the phasematching of the underlying four-wave-mixing process, with the generation of large frequency shift sidebands typically placing exacting requirements on a resonator's dispersion profile. In practice, this limits the range of viable pump wavelengths, and ultimately the range of output frequencies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
January 2023
Joint Quantum Institute, NIST/University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA.
Optical parametric oscillation (OPO) is distinguished by its wavelength access, that is, the ability to flexibly generate coherent light at wavelengths that are dramatically different from the pump laser, and in principle bounded solely by energy conservation between the input pump field and the output signal/idler fields. As society adopts advanced tools in quantum information science, metrology, and sensing, microchip OPO may provide an important path for accessing relevant wavelengths. However, a practical source of coherent light should additionally have high conversion efficiency and high output power.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Appl
February 2022
Joint Quantum Institute, NIST/University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742.
Optical parametric oscillation in a Kerr nonlinear microresonator can generate coherent laser light with frequencies that are widely separated from the pump frequency, allowing, for example, visible light to be generated using a near-infrared pump. To be practically useful, the pump-to-signal conversion efficiency must be far higher than what has been demonstrated in microresonator-based oscillators with widely-separated output frequencies. To address this challenge, here we theoretically and numerically study parametric oscillations in Kerr nonlinear microresonators, revealing an intricate solution space that arises from an interplay of nonlinear processes.
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