Dual-polarization RF channelizer based on microcombs.
Opt Express
; 32(7): 11281-11295, 2024 Mar 25.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-38570979
ABSTRACT
We report a dual-polarization radio frequency (RF) channelizer based on microcombs. Two high-Q micro-ring resonators (MRRs) with slightly different free spectral ranges (FSRs) are used one MRR is pumped to yield soliton crystal microcombs ("active"), and the other MRR is used as a "passive" periodic optical filter supporting dual-polarization operation to slice the RF spectrum. With the tailored mismatch between the FSRs of the active and passive MRRs, wideband RF spectra can be channelized into multiple segments featuring digital-compatible bandwidths via the Vernier effect. Due to the use of dual-polarization states, the number of channelized spectral segments, and thus the RF instantaneous bandwidth (with a certain spectral resolution), can be doubled. In our experiments, we used 20 microcomb lines with â¼ 49â
GHz FSR to achieve 20 channels for each polarization, with high RF spectra slicing resolutions at 144â
MHz (TE) and 163â
MHz (TM), respectively; achieving an instantaneous RF operation bandwidth of 3.1â
GHz (TE) and 2.2â
GHz (TM). Our approach paves the path towards monolithically integrated photonic RF receivers (the key components - active and passive MRRs are all fabricated on the same platform) with reduced complexity, size, and unprecedented performance, which is important for wide RF applications with digital-compatible signal detection.
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Ano de publicação:
2024
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Article