Photorefraction-assisted self-emergence of dissipative Kerr solitons
Generated in high-Q optical microresonators, dissipative Kerr soliton microcombs constitute broadband optical frequency combs with chip sizes and repetition rates in the microwave to millimeter-wave range. For frequency metrology applications such as spectroscopy, optical atomic clocks and frequency...
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Zusammenfassung: | Generated in high-Q optical microresonators, dissipative Kerr soliton
microcombs constitute broadband optical frequency combs with chip sizes and
repetition rates in the microwave to millimeter-wave range. For frequency
metrology applications such as spectroscopy, optical atomic clocks and
frequency synthesizers, octave-spanning soliton microcombs generated in
dispersion optimized microresonator are required, which allow self-referencing
for full frequency stabilization. In addition, field-deployable applications
require the generation of such soliton microcombs simple, deterministic, and
reproducible. Here, we demonstrate a novel scheme to generate self-emerging
solitons in integrated lithium niobate microresonators. The single soliton
features a broadband spectral bandwidth with dual dispersive waves, allowing
2f-3f self-referencing. Via harnessing the photorefractive effect of lithium
niobate to significantly extend the soliton existence range, we observe a
spontaneous yet deterministic single-soliton formation. The soliton is immune
to external perturbation and can operate continuously over 13 hours without
active feedback control. Finally, via integration with a pre-programed DFB
laser, we demonstrate turnkey soliton generation. With further improvement of
microresonator Q and hybrid integration with chip-scale laser chips, compact
soliton microcomb devices with electronic actuation can be created, which can
become central elements for future LiDAR, microwave photonics and optical
telecommunications. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2305.02590 |