Optimizing Coherence Suppression in a Laser Broadened by Phase Modulation with Noise
Jonathan M. Wheeler, Jacob N. Chamoun, Michel J. F. Digonnet

TL;DR
This paper presents a model to optimize carrier suppression in a phase-modulated laser broadened source, validated by experiments, enabling more effective incoherent light generation for applications like fiber optic gyroscopes.
Contribution
It introduces a calculation method for carrier suppression based on noise PDF and demonstrates how to optimize parameters for robust suppression in practical setups.
Findings
Carrier suppression better than -30 dB achievable with proper parameter tuning.
Experimental validation shows -44 dB suppression consistent with model predictions.
Model helps in selecting parameters resilient to temperature and aging effects.
Abstract
Phase noise can be modulated onto the output of a laser with an electro-optic phase modulator (EOM) to create a highly incoherent broadened source with low intensity noise. This technique leaves a small but finite fraction of the coherent carrier power that can be highly detrimental in applications requiring incoherent light. This paper shows that the carrier suppression in a laser broadened by this technique can be calculated for an arbitrary noise probability density function. The carrier suppression can be varied experimentally by adjusting the noise voltage standard deviation and saturation voltage of the amplifier that amplifies the noise source that drives the EOM. Simulations show that suppressions better than -30 dB are attainable for reasonable tolerances in , for example an EOM with a of 4.7 V, a of 6.3V, and…
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