Optical phase-coherent link between an optical atomic clock. and 1550 nm mode-locked lasers

Similar documents
Control of coherent light and its broad applications

Control of the frequency comb from a modelocked Erbium-doped fiber laser

Timing Noise Measurement of High-Repetition-Rate Optical Pulses

A transportable optical frequency comb based on a mode-locked fibre laser

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION DOI: /NPHOTON

taccor Optional features Overview Turn-key GHz femtosecond laser

Testing with Femtosecond Pulses

Long-term Absolute Wavelength Stability of Acetylene-stabilized Reference Laser at 1533 nm

TIGER Femtosecond and Picosecond Ti:Sapphire Lasers. Customized systems with SESAM technology*

Ultrahigh precision synchronization of optical and microwave frequency sources

Pound-Drever-Hall Locking of a Chip External Cavity Laser to a High-Finesse Cavity Using Vescent Photonics Lasers & Locking Electronics

Optical generation of frequency stable mm-wave radiation using diode laser pumped Nd:YAG lasers

Recent Progress in Pulsed Optical Synchronization Systems

Observation of Rb Two-Photon Absorption Directly Excited by an. Erbium-Fiber-Laser-Based Optical Frequency. Comb via Spectral Control

A new picosecond Laser pulse generation method.

레이저의주파수안정화방법및그응용 박상언 ( 한국표준과학연구원, 길이시간센터 )

Using GNSS for optical frequency and wavelength measurements

Designing for Femtosecond Pulses

Status on Pulsed Timing Distribution Systems and Implementations at DESY, FERMI and XFEL

How to build an Er:fiber femtosecond laser

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

Femtosecond optical parametric oscillator frequency combs for high-resolution spectroscopy in the mid-infrared

Carrier-envelope phase stabilization of modelocked lasers

Femtosecond Synchronization of Laser Systems for the LCLS

High Power and Energy Femtosecond Lasers

Wavelength Control and Locking with Sub-MHz Precision

The Frequency Comb (R)evolution. Thomas Udem Max-Planck Institut für Quantenoptik Garching/Germany

Suppression of amplitude-to-phase noise conversion in balanced optical-microwave phase detectors

Optical phase-locked loop for coherent transmission over 500 km using heterodyne detection with fiber lasers

High power single frequency 780nm laser source generated from frequency doubling of a seeded fiber amplifier in a cascade of PPLN crystals

A continuous-wave Raman silicon laser

Ph 77 ADVANCED PHYSICS LABORATORY ATOMIC AND OPTICAL PHYSICS

Nonlinear Optics (WiSe 2015/16) Lecture 9: December 11, 2015

RF-based Synchronization of the Seed and Pump-Probe Lasers to the Optical Synchronization System at FLASH

R. J. Jones Optical Sciences OPTI 511L Fall 2017

R. J. Jones College of Optical Sciences OPTI 511L Fall 2017

urements on the a 3 component of the transition P(13) 43-0 of 127 I 2. The

The Proposed MIT X-ray Laser Facility: Laser Seeding to Achieve the Transform Limit

Lecture 6 Fiber Optical Communication Lecture 6, Slide 1

STABILIZATION OF THE ABSOLUTE FREQUENCY AND PHASE OF A COMPACT, LOW JITTER MODELOCKED SEMICONDUCTOR DIODE LASER

DEVELOPMENT OF A NEW INJECTION LOCKING RING LASER AMPLIFIER USING A COUNTER INJECTION: MULTIWAVELENGTH AMPLIFICATION

High-resolution frequency standard at 1030 nm for Yb:YAG solid-state lasers

UNMATCHED OUTPUT POWER AND TUNING RANGE

Supplementary Information - Optical Frequency Comb Generation from a Monolithic Microresonator

Carrier-Envelope Phase Stabilization of Single and Multiple Femtosecond Lasers

Extending the Offset Frequency Range of the D2-135 Offset Phase Lock Servo by Indirect Locking

Optoelectronic Oscillator Topologies based on Resonant Tunneling Diode Fiber Optic Links

Jungwon Kim, Jonathan A. Cox, Jian J. Chen & Franz X. Kärtner. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and Research Laboratory

TIME AND FREQUENCY ACTIVITIES AT THE CSIR NATIONAL METROLOGY LABORATORY

Stable dual-wavelength oscillation of an erbium-doped fiber ring laser at room temperature

SYNCHRONIZATION SYSTEMS FOR ERLS

APPLICATION NOTE Frequency Comb Research Advances Using Tunable Diode Lasers

Supplementary Information. All-fibre photonic signal generator for attosecond timing. and ultralow-noise microwave

National standards of length for high-capacity optical fiber communication systems

High-Power Femtosecond Lasers

Communication using Synchronization of Chaos in Semiconductor Lasers with optoelectronic feedback

Optical Frequency Synthesis Based on Mode- Locked Lasers

The Theta Laser A Low Noise Chirped Pulse Laser. Dimitrios Mandridis

o Conclusion and future work. 2

Swept Wavelength Testing:

DBR based passively mode-locked 1.5m semiconductor laser with 9 nm tuning range Moskalenko, V.; Williams, K.A.; Bente, E.A.J.M.

First step in the industry-based development of an ultra-stable optical cavity for space applications

Fiber Laser Chirped Pulse Amplifier

PLL Synchronizer User s Manual / Version 1.0.6

Research Activities on Time and Frequency National Metrology Institute of Japan (NMIJ)/AIST

Chad A. Husko 1,, Sylvain Combrié 2, Pierre Colman 2, Jiangjun Zheng 1, Alfredo De Rossi 2, Chee Wei Wong 1,

A 40 GHz, 770 fs regeneratively mode-locked erbium fiber laser operating

Phase-coherent synthesis of optical frequencies and waveforms

TIMING DISTRIBUTION AND SYNCHRONIZATION COMPLETE SOLUTIONS FROM ONE SINGLE SOURCE

Active mode-locking of miniature fiber Fabry-Perot laser (FFPL) in a ring cavity

VELA PHOTOINJECTOR LASER. E.W. Snedden, Lasers and Diagnostics Group

Performance of the Prototype NLC RF Phase and Timing Distribution System *

PHOTONIC INTEGRATED CIRCUITS FOR PHASED-ARRAY BEAMFORMING

Advanced Optical Communications Prof. R. K. Shevgaonkar Department of Electrical Engineering Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay

Module 16 : Integrated Optics I

Compact, Ti:sapphire based methane-stabilized optical molecular frequency comb and clock

Mode-locking and frequency beating in. compact semiconductor lasers. Michael J. Strain

PN9000 PULSED CARRIER MEASUREMENTS

HIGH-PRECISION LASER MASTER OSCILLATORS FOR OPTICAL TIMING DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS IN FUTURE LIGHT SOURCES

Chapter 4 Application of OPLLs in coherent beam combining

Carrier-Envelope Phase Stabilization of Modelocked Lasers

Photonics and Optical Communication Spring 2005

Optical Phase Lock Loop (OPLL) with Tunable Frequency Offset for Distributed Optical Sensing Applications

Supplementary Materials for

A n optical frequency comb (OFC), a light source whose spectrum consists of a series of discrete, equally

Setup of the four-wavelength Doppler lidar system with feedback controlled pulse shaping

ModBox - Spectral Broadening Unit

Highly Phase Stable Mode-Locked Lasers

Photonics (OPTI 510R 2017) - Final exam. (May 8, 10:30am-12:30pm, R307)

Optical design of shining light through wall experiments

All-Optical Clock Division Using Period-one Oscillation of Optically Injected Semiconductor Laser

Frequency Noise Reduction of Integrated Laser Source with On-Chip Optical Feedback

Multi-user, 10 Gb/s spectrally. coded O-CDMA system with hybrid chip and slot-level timing coordination

HIGH-PERFORMANCE microwave oscillators require a

Testing with 40 GHz Laser Sources

Fiber-optic resonator sensors based on comb synthesizers

Investigations on the performance of lidar measurements with different pulse shapes using a multi-channel Doppler lidar system

A Low-Noise 1542nm Laser Stabilized to an

Frequency Comb Development for Ultra- Precise Space Based Applications

Synchronization in Chaotic Vertical-Cavity Surface-Emitting Semiconductor Lasers

Transcription:

Optical phase-coherent link between an optical atomic clock and 1550 nm mode-locked lasers Kevin W. Holman, David J. Jones, Steven T. Cundiff, and Jun Ye* JILA, National Institute of Standards and Technology and University of Colorado Boulder, CO 80309-0440 (303)-735-3171 (Voice) 303-492-5235 (Fax) Ye@jila.colorado.edu John B. Schlager National Institute of Standards and Technology, Boulder, CO 80303 Erich P. Ippen Research Laboratory of Electronics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge, MA 02139 Abstract: We report the lowest timing jitter and direct optical phase coherence between 1550 nm mode-locked laser sources and an 800 nm femtosecond frequency comb serving as the clockwork for an optical atomic clock. 1

Femtosecond (fs) optical frequency combs have made major impacts on frequency metrology and ultrafast optics [1,2]. A logical next step is to extend the spectral coverage into the 1.5 µm wavelength region, where compact, reliable, and efficient mode-locked lasers exist [3]. Frequency reference grids at these wavelengths could find applications in dense wavelength division multiplexed (DWDM) systems, photonic samplers in high-speed A/D conversion, and distribution of optical frequency standards over optical fiber networks. We report results of tight synchronization between the repetition rates and coherent phase locking of the optical carriers of the 1550 nm mode-locked laser sources and a Ti:Sapphire -based fs frequency comb, which is used as clockwork for an optical atomic clock based on a molecular iodine transition. A phase-coherent link between mode-locked lasers requires two distinct conditions to be met [4], as shown in Fig. 1. The comb spacing of the 1550-nm source ( ) must be stabilized to the optical clock s fs comb spacing (f rep,775 ). Second, the combs offset frequencies (f ceo,775 and f ceo,1550 ) must be phase locked together. This latter step requires spectral overlap between the two combs. The wide bandwidth optical frequency comb generated by the mode-locked fs Ti:sapphire laser is phase locked to a highly stable, iodine-based optical frequency standard [5]. The optical comb of the 1550-nm source is frequency doubled and compared against the Ti:sapphire comb at a mutually accessible spectral region to generate a heterodyne beat. We have investigated three different types of passively mode-locked lasers in the 1550-nm region, including an erbium/ytterbium-doped waveguide laser, an erbium-doped fiber laser, and a mode-locked laser diode (MLLD). Each laser offers at least two control parameters to obtain simultaneous time synchronization and carrier phase locking. For example, stabilization through 2

the cavity length is a common feature for all three lasers. The carrier-envelope offset frequency (f ceo,1550 ) can be tuned in both waveguide and fiber lasers through control of the intensity of their pump lasers. A MLLD on the other hand can be tuned with both the injection current and the reverse bias voltage on the saturable absorber. Among the three mode-locked laser sources, the waveguide laser achieved the lowest residual timing jitter with a record-low, root-mean-square relative timing jitter of 14.4 fs integrated from 10 Hz to 375 MHz (the Nyquist frequency), owing to the laser s high-q cavity and overall gain dynamics. Although the MLLD has a larger rms timing jitter of ~ 22 fs within the bandwidth of 1 Hz 100 MHz, it does offer the advantage of a compact size, robust operation, and completely electrical control, along with the potential in device improvements to lower the jitter at high frequencies. In pursuit of simultaneous synchronization and phase locking, the MLLD displays particularly interesting mode-locking dynamics and we need to understand the dependence of the MLLD comb dynamics on all of its relevant operating variables, i.e., the injection current I d, the reverse bias voltage on the saturable absorber V s, and the external cavity length l c. When the value of V s is increased, the band gap of the saturable absorber shifts to a lower energy, resulting in a larger value of refractive index, n, at the operating wavelength. A smaller band gap also leads to an increase in the band edge curvature, and so (dn/dω) increases. Hence, the pulse group velocity decreases, leading to a reduced value of. The differential rates of change of n and (dn/dω) also cause a change in f ceo,1550 as V s increases. On the other hand, when I d increases, the enhanced free-carrier density leads to smaller values of n and hence larger values of. The influence of I d on (dn/dω) is more complicated and is related to the wavelength and current 3

dependence of the linewidth enhancement factor (α) of the specific diode structure. Empirically we find that a larger I d leads to a smaller f ceo,1550. Since changes in V s affect both f ceo,1550 and in a similar manner, while changes in I d cause opposite changes in f ceo,1550 and, we have implemented the following strategy for optimal control. Error signals associated with fluctuations of both f ceo,1550 and are combined linearly with appropriate signs and gains respectively to produce two control signals, one for I d, and the other for V s. This process represents a simple diagonalization of a 2 2 matrix, leading to two orthogonal control loops for f ceo,1550 and. In addition, the piezoactivated external cavity mirror can be used to vary l c so that a higher loop gain in the low frequency range can be implemented to control f ceo,1550. Sensitivity of the l c change on is overwhelmed by the combined action of I d and V s and it can be safely neglected in the overall design of the control loop. With the implementation of the orthogonal control loop, we have achieved simultaneous stabilization of f ceo,1550 and with basically no compromise in performance for either f ceo,1550 or, as compared to the optimized and independent single-parameter control. Without an optimized orthogonal control, stabilization of one parameter causes a degradation of the other parameter. The MLLD repetition rate is first stabilized to f rep,775 by modulating the saturable absorber with an injection microwave signal that is extracted from the iodine-based optical atomic clock. The 8 th harmonic of the clock signal matches the fundamental repetition rate of the MLLD of 6.0 GHz. To improve the synchronization further (leading to lower residual timing jitter),, which is detected by a fast detector receiving a portion of the MLLD 4

optical output, is phase-sensitively compared against (8 f rep,775 ) and the resultant error signal is fed into the orthogonal control loop. To phase lock the MLLD s f ceo,1550 to that of the optical clock s fs comb, the optical output of the MLLD is first amplified by two stages of erbium-doped fiber amplifiers and then focused into a 2 cm long piece of periodically-poled Lithium-Niobate (PPLN) for efficient second harmonic generation, producing 35 µw centered at 775 nm. The frequency-doubled signal from the MLLD is then co-linearly combined with the Ti:sapphire femtosecond comb to generate a heterodyne beat (= 2 f ceo,1550 f ceo,775 ). The heterodyne beat is processed by a digital phase detector against a stable radio frequency reference and the subsequent error signal is fed into the orthogonal control loop. Figure 2 demonstrates the effect of the orthogonal control loop optimized for both f ceo,1550 and. The dashed line in Fig. 2(a) represents the spectral density of the residual timing jitter obtained by comparing the phase of against that of (8 f rep,775 ) when the lasers are synchronized by injection of the external microwave clock signal to the saturable absorber. Any attempt to stabilize f ceo,1550 via control of V s leads to increased timing jitter in the synchronization loop, as shown by the solid trace in Fig. 2(a). However, by maintaining the microwave injection to the saturable absorber and activating the orthogonal control loop to stabilize both f ceo,1550 and, the residual timing jitter is reduced by a factor of 10 within the bandwidth of the servo loop, shown by the dotted trace in Fig. 2(a). This level of performance for the synchronization loop is basically the same as if only is stabilized while f ceo,1550 is left floating. Figure 2(b) illustrates the second important aspect of the orthogonal control. Three traces are shown, depicting the line shape of the heterodyne beat signal (2 f ceo,1550 f ceo,775 ) under three different conditions. The top trace represents the beat signal when the MLLD is synchronized to the 5

Ti:sapphire laser comb via injection to the saturable absorber. When the synchronization is further improved by using only feedback on I d, the phase error of the loop (corresponding to the residual timing jitter) can be reduced by a factor of 10. However, the linewidth of the heterodyne beat, and hence f ceo,1550, is broadened. This scenario is shown by the trace in the middle of Fig. 2(b). When the orthogonal control loop is activated, not only is the loop improved as shown in Fig. 2(a), but the coherence of f ceo,1550 is also improved as shown by the narrowed line shape of the bottom trace in Fig. 2(b). Figure 3 (a) shows frequency-counting records of the beat between the MLLD and Ti:sapphire combs under locked and unlocked conditions. At 1-s gate time, the rms fluctuation (σ rms ) of the heterodyne beat is 1.5 MHz when f ceo,1550 is not stabilized. Under the orthogonal control condition, σ rms of (2 f ceo,1550 f ceo,775 ) is reduced to 3.2 mhz. By monitoring the beat error signal produced by the digital phase detector we insure that no cycles have slipped over this measurement period. Allan deviation of the stabilized beat frequency record is shown in Fig. 3 (b), determined with respect to the 1550 nm optical carrier frequency. The deviation averages down somewhere between 1/τ and 1/ τ (τ is the averaging time), indicating a mixture of white frequency and phase noise in the phase-locked loop. We thank Dr. J. Hall for useful discussions. This work is supported by ONR, NASA, AFOSR, NIST, and NSF. K. Holman is a Hertz Foundation graduate Fellow. 6

References: 1. Th. Udem, R. Holzwarth, and T. Hansch, Nature 416, 233 (2002). 2. S. T. Cundiff and J. Ye, Rev. Mod. Phys. 75, 325 (2003). 3. D. J. Jones, K. W. Holman, M. Notcutt, J. Ye, J. Chandalia, L. Jiang, E. Ippen, and H. Yokoyama, Opt. Lett. 28, 813 (2003). 4. R. K. Shelton, L.-S. Ma, H. C. Kapteyn, M. M. Murnane, J. L. Hall, and J. Ye, Science 293, 1286 (2001). 5. J. Ye, L.-S. Ma, and J. L. Hall, Phys. Rev. Lett. 87, 270801 (2001). 7

Figure Captions: Fig. 1 Schematic diagram of simultaneous synchronization and phase locking between a 1.55-µm MLLD and a 775-nm mode-locked Ti:sapphire laser. The shaded area shows the implementation of an optical clock based on a Ti:sapphire fs comb phase-stabilized to an iodine standard. The MLLD s repetition frequency is 8 times that of the Ti:sapphire (not as shown in the figure). Fig. 2 (a) Relative timing jitter for the synchronization loop under the conditions of (1) microwave injection to the saturable absorber (dashed trace); (2) synchronization via injection locking and phase locking via saturable absorber bias voltage (solid trace); and (3) synchronization and phase locking via orthogonalized control (dotted trace). (b) Heterodyne beat signals between the frequency doubled MLLD and the Ti:sapphire combs under the conditions of (1) synchronization via microwave injection to the saturable absorber (top trace); (2) synchronization via injection current (I d ) servo (middle trace); and (3) synchronization and phase locking via orthogonalized control (bottom trace). The traces are offset vertically for viewing clarity. Fig. 3 (a) Heterodyne beat recorded by a frequency counter at 1 s gate time, under no phase locking (short trace, with respect to the right vertical axis) and phase locking (long trace, with respect to the left vertical axis). (b) Allan deviation associated with the phase-locked signal. 8

Ti:sapphire comb (in optical clock) 1550 nm comb ν n x2 Set f ceo,775 =0 f ceo,775 ν 2n I(f f ceo,1550 SHG to 775 nm 0 ν m f rep,775 f ν opt Optical Standard (Iodine) set ν m = ν opt Figure 1 9

Jitter Spectral Density (fs Hz -1/2 ) 100 10 1 0.1 0.01 stabilized by injection lock same as above, along with f ceo,1550 stabilized via V s and f ceo,1550 stabilized simultaneously by orthogonal control 10 1 10 2 10 3 10 4 10 5 10 6 10 7 Fourier Frequency (Hz) -20 stabilized by injection lock only RBW = 30 khz Beat amplitude (db) -30-40 -50-60 stabilized via I d -70-80 & f ceo,1550 stabilized simultaneously by orthogonal control 170 180 190 200 210 220 230 Frequency (MHz) Figure 2 10

Freq. Deviation (mhz) -20-10 0 10 20 0 (a) 200 400 unlocked, σ=1.5 MHz locked, σ=3.2 mhz Time (s) 600 800 4 2 0-2 1000 Freq. Deviation (MHz) Allan Deviation 10-17 10-18 10-19 1 (b) 2 3 4 5 6 10 1/sqrt(τ) 1/τ 2 3 4 5 6 Averaging time (s) 100 2 3 4 5 6 Figure 3 11