Microresonator solitons for massively parallel coherent optical communications
Pablo Marin-Palomo, Juned N. Kemal, Maxim Karpov, Arne Kordts, Joerg, Pfeifle, Martin H. P. Pfeiffer, Philipp Trocha, Stefan Wolf, Victor Brasch,, Miles H. Anderson, Ralf Rosenberger, Kovendhan Vijayan, Wolfgang Freude,, Tobias J. Kippenberg, Christian Koos

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the use of dissipative Kerr solitons in microresonators to enable massively parallel, high-capacity optical communication systems with over 50 Tbit/s transmission using integrated frequency combs.
Contribution
It introduces a novel application of microresonator Kerr solitons for scalable, coherent WDM optical communications, combining high data rates with integrated comb sources.
Findings
Transmitted over 50 Tbit/s using 179 carriers
Achieved coherent detection with microresonator Kerr combs
Showed potential to replace arrays of CW lasers in high-speed systems
Abstract
Optical solitons are waveforms that preserve their shape while propagating, relying on a balance of dispersion and nonlinearity. Soliton-based data transmission schemes were investigated in the 1980s, promising to overcome the limitations imposed by dispersion of optical fibers. These approaches, however, were eventually abandoned in favor of wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM) schemes that are easier to implement and offer improved scalability to higher data rates. Here, we show that solitons may experience a comeback in optical communications, this time not as a competitor, but as a key element of massively parallel WDM. Instead of encoding data on the soliton itself, we exploit continuously circulating dissipative Kerr solitons (DKS) in a microresonator. DKS are generated in an integrated silicon nitride microresonator by four-photon interactions mediated by Kerr nonlinearity,…
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