Chip-based frequency comb generator with microwave repetition rate
US-9042003-B2 · May 26, 2015 · US
US9595918B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9595918-B2 |
| Application number | US-201514640031-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Mar 6, 2015 |
| Priority date | Mar 6, 2014 |
| Publication date | Mar 14, 2017 |
| Grant date | Mar 14, 2017 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
A microwave-frequency source, generating an output electrical signal at an output frequency f M , comprises a pump laser source, an optical resonator, and a photodetector. Free spectral range v FSR of the optical resonator equals an integer submultiple of a Brillouin shift frequency v B of the optical resonator (i.e., v B =Mv FSR ). The pump laser source is frequency-locked to a corresponding resonant optical mode of the optical resonator. Pumping the optical resonator with output of the pump laser source at a pump frequency v pump results in stimulated Brillouin laser oscillation in the optical resonator at respective first, second, and third Stokes Brillouin-shifted frequencies v 1 =v pump −v B , v 2 =v pump −2v B , and v 3 =v pump −3v B . The photodetector receives stimulated Brillouin laser outputs at the first and third Stokes Brillouin-shifted frequencies v 1 and v 3 and generates therefrom the output electrical signal at a beat frequency f M =v 1 −v 3 =2v B . The output electrical signal at the output frequency f M exhibits exceptionally low phase noise.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. A microwave-frequency source for generating an output electrical signal at an output frequency f M , the microwave-frequency source comprising a pump laser source, an optical resonator, and a photodetector, wherein: (a) a free spectral range v FSR of the optical resonator is substantially equal to an integer submultiple of a Brillouin shift frequency v B of the optical resonator so that v B =Mv FSR where M is an integer; (b) the pump laser source is frequency-locked to a corresponding resonant optical mode of the optical resonator; (c) the pump laser source and the optical resonator are arranged so that pumping the optical resonator with output of the pump laser source at a pump frequency v pump results in stimulated Brillouin laser oscillation in the optical resonator at respective first, second, and third Stokes Brillouin-shifted frequencies v 1 =v pump −v B , v 2 =v pump −2v B , and v 3 =v pump −3v B ; and (d) the photodetector is arranged to receive stimulated Brillouin laser outputs at the first and third Stokes Brillouin-shifted frequencies v 1 and v 3 and to generate therefrom the output electrical signal at a beat frequency f M =v 1 −v 3 =2v B . 2. The microwave-frequency source of claim 1 wherein the first and third Stokes stimulated Brillouin laser outputs co-propagate along a common optical path from the optical resonator to the photodetector. 3. The microwave-frequency source of claim 1 wherein the optical resonator is structurally arranged so as to suppress stimulated Brillouin laser oscillation at a fourth Stokes Brillouin-shifted frequency v 4 =v pump −4v B . 4. The microwave-frequency source of claim 1 wherein the free spectral range v FSR of the optical resonator is substantially equal to the Brillouin shift frequency v B of the optical resonator. 5. The microwave-frequency source of claim 1 wherein the optical resonator comprises silica and the Brillouin shift frequency v B of the optical resonator is about 10.87 GHz. 6. The microwave-frequency source of claim 1 wherein the optical resonator comprises a ring optical resonator. 7. The microwave-frequency source of claim 6 wherein the ring optical resonator comprises a disk optical resonator. 8. The microwave-frequency source of claim 6 wherein the pump laser source and the ring optical resonator are arranged so that pumping the ring optical resonator with the output of the pump laser source at the pump frequency v pump results in (i) backward-propagating stimulated Brillouin laser oscillation in the ring optical resonator at the respective first and third Stokes Brillouin-shifted frequencies v 1 and v 3 and (ii) forward-propagating stimulated Brillouin laser oscillation in the ring optical resonator at the second Stokes Brillouin-shifted frequency v 2 . 9. The microwave-frequency source of claim 1 wherein the optical resonator comprises a fiber optical resonator. 10. The microwave-frequency source of claim 9 wherein the fiber optical resonator includes a fiber Bragg grating that is structurally arranged so as to suppress stimulated Brillouin laser oscillation at a fourth Stokes Brillouin-shifted frequency v 4 =v pump −4v B . 11. The microwave-frequency source of claim 9 wherein the fiber optical resonator comprises a fiber Fabry-Perot optical resonator. 12. The microwave-frequency source of claim 9 wherein the fiber optical resonator comprises a fiber-loop optical resonator. 13. The microwave-frequency source of claim 12 wherein the pump laser source and the fiber-loop optical resonator are arranged so that pumping the fiber-loop optical resonator with the output of the pump laser source at the pump frequency v pump results in (i) backward-propagating stimulated Brillouin laser oscillation in the fiber-loop optical resonator at the respective first and third Stokes Brillouin-shifted frequencies v 1 and v 3 and (ii) forward-propagating stimulated Brillouin laser oscillation in the fiber-loop optical resonator at the second Stokes Brillouin-shifted frequency v 2 . 14. The microwave-frequency source of claim 9 wherein the fiber optical resonator includes an optical fiber greater than or equal to about 20 meters long. 15. The microwave-frequency source of claim 9 wherein the fiber optical resonator includes an optical fiber greater than or equal to about 40 meters long. 16. The microwave-frequency source of claim 9 wherein the fiber optical resonator includes an optical fiber greater than or equal to about 100 meters long. 17. The microwave-frequency source of claim 9 wherein the fiber optical resonator includes an optical fiber greater than or equal to about 200 meters long. 18. The microwave-frequency source of claim 9 wherein the fiber optical resonator includes an optical fiber greater than or equal to about 500 meters long. 19. The microwave-frequency source of claim 1 wherein the output electrical signal has a bandwidth less than about 100 Hz over about a 1 second timescale. 20. The microwave-frequency source of claim 1 wherein the output electrical signal has a bandwidth less than about 1 Hz over about a 1 second timescale. 21. The microwave-frequency source of claim 1 wherein the output electrical signal exhibits a phase noise level less than about −30 dBc/Hz at 100 Hz offset frequency and less than about −90 dBc/Hz at 10 kHz offset frequency. 22. The microwave-frequency source of claim 1 wherein the output electrical signal exhibits a phase noise level less than about −70 dBc/Hz at 100 Hz offset frequency and less than about −110 dBc/Hz at 10 kHz offset frequency. 23. The microwave-frequency source of claim 1 wherein the pump laser source is frequency-locked to the corresponding resonant optical mode of the optical resonator by a Pound-Drever-Hall mechanism. 24. A method for generating a microwave-frequency output electrical signal using the microwave-frequency source of claim 1 , the method comprising: (a) using the pump laser source, pumping the optical resonator so as to generate the stimulated Brillouin laser oscillation at the first, second, and third Stokes Brillouin-shifted frequencies; and (b) directing the stimulated Brillouin laser outputs at the first and third Stokes Brillouin-shifted frequencies onto the photodetector so as to generate the microwave-frequency output electrical signal at the frequency f M =2v B . 25. A method for generating a microwave-frequency output electrical signal at an output frequency f M , the method comprising: (a) using a pump laser source, pumping at a pump frequency v pump an optical resonator so as to generate stimulated Brillouin laser outputs at respective first and third Stokes Brillouin-shifted frequencies v 1 =v pump −v B and v 3 =v pump −3v B , where v B is a Brillouin shift frequency of the optical resonator; and (b) directing the stimulated Brillouin laser outputs at the first and third Stokes Brillouin-shifted frequencies onto a photodetector so as to generate an output electrical signal at a beat frequency f M =v 1 −v 3 =2v B , wherein: (c) a free spectral range v FSR of the optical resonator is substantially equal to an integer submultiple of the Brillouin shift frequency v B of the optical resonator so that v B =Mv FSR where M is an integer; (d) the pump laser source is frequency-locked to a corresponding resonant optical mode of the optical resonator; (e) the pump laser source and the optical resonator are arranged so that pu
Fibre ring lasers (fibre laser gyrometers G01C19/72) · CPC title
by controlling the optical pumping · CPC title
Two-wavelenghth emission · CPC title
for modulating the output, i.e. the laser beam is modulated outside the laser cavity · CPC title
in an optical fibre · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.