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Keywords = intracavity phase interferometry

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10 pages, 10655 KB  
Communication
Mode-Locked Fiber Laser Sensors with Orthogonally Polarized Pulses Circulating in the Cavity
by Hanieh Afkhamiardakani and Jean-Claude Diels
Sensors 2023, 23(5), 2531; https://doi.org/10.3390/s23052531 - 24 Feb 2023
Viewed by 2694
Abstract
Intracavity phase interferometry is a powerful phase sensing technique using two correlated, counter-propagating frequency combs (pulse trains) in mode-locked lasers. Generating dual frequency combs of the same repetition rate in fiber lasers is a new field with hitherto unanticipated challenges. The large intensity [...] Read more.
Intracavity phase interferometry is a powerful phase sensing technique using two correlated, counter-propagating frequency combs (pulse trains) in mode-locked lasers. Generating dual frequency combs of the same repetition rate in fiber lasers is a new field with hitherto unanticipated challenges. The large intensity in the fiber core, coupled with the nonlinear index of glass, result in a cumulative nonlinear index on axis that dwarfs the signal to be measured. The large saturable gain changes in an unpredictable way the repetition rate of the laser impeding the creation of frequency combs with identical repetition rate. The huge amount of phase coupling between pulses crossing at the saturable absorber eliminates the small signal response (deadband). Although there have been prior observation of gyroscopic response in mode-locked ring lasers, to our knowledge this is the first time that orthogonally polarized pulses were used to successfully eliminate the deadband and obtain a beat note. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Optical Sensors, Pushing the Limits)
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13 pages, 1485 KB  
Article
Control of Frequency Combs with Passive Resonators
by James Hendrie, Ning Hsu and Jean-Claude Diels
Sensors 2023, 23(3), 1066; https://doi.org/10.3390/s23031066 - 17 Jan 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2646
Abstract
Tailored optical frequency combs are generated by nesting passive etalons within mode-locked oscillators. In this work, the oscillator generates a comb of 6.8 GHz with 106 MHz side-bands. This tailored comb results from the self-synchronized locking of two cavities with precision optical frequency [...] Read more.
Tailored optical frequency combs are generated by nesting passive etalons within mode-locked oscillators. In this work, the oscillator generates a comb of 6.8 GHz with 106 MHz side-bands. This tailored comb results from the self-synchronized locking of two cavities with precision optical frequency tuning. In this manuscript, it is demonstrated that these combs can be precisely predicted utilizing a temporal ABCD matrix method and precise comb frequency tuning by scanning over the D1 transition line of 87Rb and observing the fluorescence. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Optical Sensors, Pushing the Limits)
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9 pages, 1428 KB  
Article
Phase Nanoscopy with Correlated Frequency Combs
by Xiaobing Zhu, Matthias Lenzner and Jean-Claude Diels
Sensors 2023, 23(1), 301; https://doi.org/10.3390/s23010301 - 28 Dec 2022
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2898
Abstract
This study addresses any sensor based on measuring a physical quantity through the phase of a probing beam. This includes sensing of rotation, acceleration, index change, displacement, fields… While most phase measurements are made by detecting an amplitude change in interfering beams, we [...] Read more.
This study addresses any sensor based on measuring a physical quantity through the phase of a probing beam. This includes sensing of rotation, acceleration, index change, displacement, fields… While most phase measurements are made by detecting an amplitude change in interfering beams, we detect instead a phase change through a relative frequency shift of two correlated frequency combs. This paper explores the limit sensitivity that this method can achieve, when the combs are generated in an Optical Parametric Oscillator (OPO), pumped synchronously by a train of femtosecond pulses separated by half the OPO cavity round-trip time. It is shown that a phase difference as small as 0.4 nanoradians can be resolved between the two pulses circulating in the cavity. This phase difference is one order of magnitude better than the previous record. The root-mean-square deviation of the measured phase over measuring time is close to the standard quantum limit (phase-photon number uncertainty product of 0.66). Innovations that made such improved performances possible include a more stable OPO cavity design; a stabilization system with a novel purely electronic locking of the OPO cavity length relative to that of the pump laser; a shorter pump laser cavity; and a square pulse generator for driving a 0.5 mm pathlength lithium niobate phase modulator. Future data acquisition improvements are suggested that will bring the phase sensitivity exactly to the standard quantum limit, and beyond the quantum limit by squeezing. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Optical Sensors, Pushing the Limits)
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18 pages, 3319 KB  
Review
Synchronously Intracavity-Pumped Picosecond Optical Parametric Oscillators for Sensors
by Alena Zavadilová, Václav Kubeček and David Vyhlídal
Sensors 2022, 22(9), 3200; https://doi.org/10.3390/s22093200 - 21 Apr 2022
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 3214
Abstract
The research and development of laser systems for intracavity phase interferometry is described. These systems are based on an intracavity synchronously pumped optical parametric oscillator (OPO), enabling the generation of two trains of picosecond pulses inside a single cavity. In such a configuration, [...] Read more.
The research and development of laser systems for intracavity phase interferometry is described. These systems are based on an intracavity synchronously pumped optical parametric oscillator (OPO), enabling the generation of two trains of picosecond pulses inside a single cavity. In such a configuration, it is possible to measure the beat note frequency between two pulses and to very precisely determine the phase difference between them. The pump source is a diode-pumped passively mode-locked Nd:YVO4 laser. A periodically poled magnesium-doped lithium niobate crystal is used as the optical parametric oscillator crystal coupling the pump and the signal cavities. We designed a synchronously pumped OPO in a linear and ring cavity configuration allowing generation in a dual-pulse regime. By a mutual detuning of both cavity lengths, the quasi-synchronous regime of pumping was achieved and high harmonics of repetition rate frequencies were generated. Such a system can be useful for applications such as pump-probe spectroscopy or for testing telecommunication systems. We also realized the subharmonic OPO cavity as a source of two independent trains of picosecond pulses suitable for intracavity phase interferometry; we also measured the beat note signal. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Optical Sensors, Pushing the Limits)
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19 pages, 739 KB  
Article
Intracavity Measurement Sensitivity Enhancement without Runaway Noise
by Luke Horstman and Jean-Claude Diels
Sensors 2021, 21(24), 8473; https://doi.org/10.3390/s21248473 - 19 Dec 2021
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 3166
Abstract
A method to increase the sensitivity of an intracavity differential phase measurement that is not made irrelevant by a larger increase of noise is explored. By introducing a phase velocity feedback by way of a resonant dispersive element in an active sensor in [...] Read more.
A method to increase the sensitivity of an intracavity differential phase measurement that is not made irrelevant by a larger increase of noise is explored. By introducing a phase velocity feedback by way of a resonant dispersive element in an active sensor in which two ultrashort pulses circulate, it is shown that the measurement sensitivity is elevated without significantly increasing the Petermann excess noise factor. This enhancement technique has considerable implications for any optical phase based measurement; from gyroscopes and accelerometers to magnetometers and optical index measurements. Here we describe the enhancement method in the context of past dispersion enhancement studies including the recent work surrounding non-Hermitian quantum mechanics, justify the method with a theoretical framework (including numerical simulations), and propose practical applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Optical Sensors, Pushing the Limits)
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