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Dual-microcavity narrow-linewidth Brillouin laser
Author(s) -
William Loh,
Adam A. S. Green,
Fred N. Baynes,
Daniel C. Cole,
Franklyn Quinlan,
Hansuek Lee,
Kerry J. Vahala,
Scott B. Papp,
Scott A. Diddams
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
optica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.074
H-Index - 107
ISSN - 2334-2536
DOI - 10.1364/optica.2.000225
Subject(s) - laser linewidth , brillouin zone , laser , optics , brillouin scattering , dual (grammatical number) , materials science , optoelectronics , physics , art , literature
Ultralow-noise yet tunable lasers are a revolutionary tool in precision spectroscopy, displacement measurements at the standard quantum limit, and the development of advanced optical atomic clocks. Further applications include lidar, coherent communications, frequency synthesis, and precision sensors of strain, motion, and temperature. While all applications benefit from lower frequency noise, many also require a laser that is robust and compact. Here, we introduce a dual-microcavity laser that leverages one chip-integrable silica microresonator to generate tunable 1550 nm laser light via stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) and a second microresonator for frequency stabilization of the SBS light. This configuration reduces the fractional frequency noise to 7.8×10^(−14)  1/√Hz at 10 Hz offset, which is a new regime of noise performance for a microresonator-based laser. Our system also features terahertz tunability and the potential for chip-level integration. We demonstrate the utility of our dual-microcavity laser by performing spectral linewidth measurements with hertz-level resolution.

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