RESUMO
Cavity ringdown spectroscopy is an essential test to measure ultrahigh quality factor (UHQ) optical cavities, which is, however, frequently misinterpreted due to lack of a specified analysis guideline. Here we clarify the basic property of cavity ringdown and present a step-by-step method that enables extraction of the overall quality factor, as well as the intrinsic loss and coupling state of UHQ cavities with better fidelity and simplicity than prior schemes. Our work can facilitate an accurate design and characterization of UHQ cavities for ultra-low noise lasers, high finesse reference cavities, and ultra-narrow optical filters.
RESUMO
Auxiliary laser heating has become a widely adopted method for Kerr soliton frequency comb generation in optical microcavities, thanks to its reliable and easy-to-achieve merits for solving the thermal instability during the formation of dissipative Kerr solitons. Here, we conduct optimization of auxiliary laser heating by leveraging the distinct loss and absorption characteristics of different longitudinal and polarization cavity modes. We show that even if the auxiliary and pump lasers enter orthogonal polarization modes, their mutual photothermal balance can be efficient enough to maintain a cavity thermal equilibrium as the pump laser enters the red-detuning soliton regime, and by choosing the most suitable resonance for the auxiliary and pump lasers, the auxiliary laser power can be reduced to 20% of the pump laser and still be capable of warranting soliton generation. Moreover, we demonstrate soliton comb generation using integrated laser modules with a few milliwatt on-chip pump and auxiliary powers, showcasing the potential for further chip integration of the auxiliary laser heating method.
RESUMO
All-optical phase regeneration aims at restoring the phase information of coherently encoded data signals directly in the optical domain so as to compensate for phase distortions caused by transceiver imperfections and nonlinear impairments along the transmission link. Although it was proposed two decades ago, all-optical phase regeneration has not been seen in realistic networks to date, mainly because this technique entails complex bulk modules and relies on high-precision phase sensitive nonlinear dynamics, both of which are adverse to field deployment. Here, we demonstrate a new, to the best of our knowledge, architecture to implement all-optical phase regeneration using integrated photonic devices. In particular, we realize quadrature phase quantization by exploring the phase-sensitive parametric wave mixing within on-chip silicon waveguides, while multiple coherent pump laser tones are provided by a chip-scale micro-cavity Kerr frequency comb. Multi-channel all-optical phase regeneration is experimentally demonstrated for 40 Gbps QPSK data, achieving the best SNR improvement of more than 6â dB. Our study showcases a promising avenue to enable the practical implementation of all-optical phase regeneration in realistic long-distance fiber transmission networks.
RESUMO
An optical format interconversion scheme between on-off keying (OOK) and quadrature phase shift keying (QPSK) is proposed and verified in this paper. The conversion system mainly consists of a coherent vector combiner and a reconfigurable two-dimensional (2D) vector mover. As a key element of the proposed conversion system, the 2D vector mover is implemented by a non-degenerate phase-sensitive amplifier (PSA). The operating principle and theoretical derivations of the PSA-based 2D vector mover are fully introduced. The reconfigurable transfer characteristics of the vector mover are analyzed under different parameter settings to exhibit the flexible 2D moving function. The signal constellations, eye diagrams, spectrum, error vector magnitudes, and bit error ratios are estimated and depicted to validate the proposed idea. With the input signal-to-noise ratios of 20 dB and 25 dB, error-free conversions are achieved between 50G Baud OOK and QPSK. The scheme proposed in this paper fills the lack of the one-to-one interconversion between OOK and QPSK, and has potential applications in optical interconnect nodes, across-dimensional optical transmissions, and flexible optical transceivers.
RESUMO
We propose and demonstrate a photonic-assisted approach for generating arbitrary microwave waveforms based on a dual-polarization dual-parallel Mach-Zehnder modulator, offering significant advantages in terms of tunability of repetition rates and anti-dispersion capability. In order to generate diverse microwave waveforms, two sinusoidal radio frequency signals with distinct frequency relationships are applied to the dual-polarization dual-parallel Mach-Zehnder modulator. By adjusting the power of the applied sinusoidal radio frequency signal, the power ratio between these orthogonal polarized optical sidebands can be changed, and thereby desired radio frequency waveforms can be obtained after photoelectric conversion. In our proof-of-concept experiment, we systematically varied the repetition rate of triangular, rectangular and sawtooth waveforms. Meanwhile, we calculated the Root Mean Square Error (RMSE) to assess the approximation error in each waveform. The RMSEs are 0.1089, 0.2182 and 0.1185 for the triangular, rectangular and sawtooth microwave waveforms with repetition rate of 8 GHz, respectively. Furthermore, after passing through 25 km single mode fiber, the optical power decreased by approximately 5.6 dB, which verifies the anti-dispersion transmission capability of our signal generator.