Massively parallel coherent laser ranging using soliton microcombs
Johann Riemensberger, Anton Lukashchuk, Maxim Karpov, Wenle, Weng, Erwan Lucas, Junqiu Liu, Tobias J. Kippenberg

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel massively parallel coherent LIDAR system using soliton microcombs, enabling ultra-high frame rate 3D imaging by transferring rapid frequency chirps across multiple spectral channels simultaneously.
Contribution
The authors demonstrate a new microcomb-based LIDAR approach that achieves true parallelism and high-speed distance and velocity measurements, surpassing traditional coherent LIDAR limitations.
Findings
Generated 30 spectral channels for parallel measurements.
Achieved measurement rates of 3 million pixels per second.
Potential to exceed 150 million pixels per second with further improvements.
Abstract
Coherent ranging, also known as frequency-modulated continuous-wave (FMCW) laser based ranging (LIDAR) is currently developed for long range 3D distance and velocimetry in autonomous driving. Its principle is based on mapping distance to frequency, and to simultaneously measure the Doppler shift of reflected light using frequency chirped signals, similar to Sonar or Radar. Yet, despite these advantages, coherent ranging exhibits lower acquisition speed and requires precisely chirped and highly-coherent laser sources, hindering their widespread use and impeding Parallelization, compared to modern time-of-flight (TOF) ranging that use arrays of individual lasers. Here we demonstrate a novel massively parallel coherent LIDAR scheme using a photonic chip-based microcomb. By fast chirping the pump laser in the soliton existence range of a microcomb with amplitudes up to several GHz and sweep…
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