New! Sign up for our free email newsletter.
Science News
from research organizations

Breaking the optical bandwidth record of stable pulsed lasers

Date:
January 23, 2017
Source:
INRS
Summary:
Researchers have redefined the limitations and constraints for ultra-fast pulsed lasers. They have produced the first pulsed passively mode-locked nanosecond laser, with a record-low and transform-limited spectral width of 105 MHz. With a compact architecture, modest power requirements, and the unique ability to resolve the full laser spectrum in the RF domain, the laser paves the way towards full on-chip integration for novel sensing and spectroscopy implementations.
Share:
FULL STORY

The Ultrafast Optical Processing Group at INRS (Institut national de la recherche scientifique) has redefined the limitations and constraints for ultra-fast pulsed lasers. As reported in Nature Photonics, researchers from the team of Prof. Roberto Morandotti have produced the first pulsed passively mode-locked nanosecond laser, with a record-low and transform-limited spectral width of 105 MHz -- more than one hundred times lower than any mode-locked laser to date. With a compact architecture, modest power requirements, and the unique ability to resolve the full laser spectrum in the radio frequency (RF) domain, the laser paves the way towards full on-chip integration for novel sensing and spectroscopy implementations.

Lasers emitting intense light-pulse trains have enabled the observation of numerous phenomena in many different research disciplines, and are the basis of state-of-the-art experiments in modern physics, chemistry, biology, and astronomy. However, high pulse intensities with low repetition rates come at the expense of mediocre noise properties. This is where passively mode-locked laser systems come in: They are the optimal choice for generating low-noise optical pulse trains. Such systems have, for example, made it possible to create stable optical frequency references for metrology (Nobel Prize, 2005) as well as intense ultra-short pulses (i.e., single-cycle pulses in the attosecond regime) for the study of high-intensity light-matter interactions.

While many mode-locking techniques have been demonstrated, mainly aimed at creating increasingly shorter pulses with broader spectra, little progress has been achieved so far in tackling the opposite problem: the generation of stable nanosecond narrow-bandwidth pulsed sources.

In their latest publication, the INRS research team presents a novel laser architecture that capitalizes on recent advances in nonlinear micro-cavity optics, pushing the boundaries further. Specifically, they exploit the narrowband filter characteristic of integrated microring resonators which, in addition to enabling high nonlinear phase shifts, make it possible to generate nanosecond pulses though mode-locking.

"The pulsed laser output generated has a spectral bandwidth so narrow it is inaccessible with state-of-the-art optical spectrum analyzers," says Michael Kues, postdoctoral fellow and principal author of the study. To characterize the laser's bandwidth, the researchers instead used a coherent optical beating technique. The record-low laser bandwidth made it possible, for the first time, to measure the full spectral characteristics of a mode-locked laser in the RF domain using widely available RF electronics only and confirming, in turn, the laser's strong temporal coherence.

Such stable narrow-bandwidth nanosecond pulsed sources are desirable for many sensing and microscopy applications, as well as for the efficient excitation of atoms and molecules (typically featuring narrow excitation bandwidths). From a fundamental perspective, the low and tractable number of optical laser modes, combined with the RF-accessibility of the associated spectrum, make the team's newly developed laser highly conducive to further study of both nonlinear mode coupling and complex mode-locking regimes.


Story Source:

Materials provided by INRS. Original written by Michael Kues. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Michael Kues, Christian Reimer, Benjamin Wetzel, Piotr Roztocki, Brent E. Little, Sai T. Chu, Tobias Hansson, Evgeny A. Viktorov, David J. Moss, Roberto Morandotti. Passively mode-locked laser with an ultra-narrow spectral width. Nature Photonics, 2017; DOI: 10.1038/nphoton.2016.271

Cite This Page:

INRS. "Breaking the optical bandwidth record of stable pulsed lasers." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 23 January 2017. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/01/170123151415.htm>.
INRS. (2017, January 23). Breaking the optical bandwidth record of stable pulsed lasers. ScienceDaily. Retrieved April 24, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/01/170123151415.htm
INRS. "Breaking the optical bandwidth record of stable pulsed lasers." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/01/170123151415.htm (accessed April 24, 2024).

Explore More

from ScienceDaily

RELATED STORIES