Chaotic micro-comb based parallel ranging
Anton Lukashchuk, Johann Riemensberger, Aleksandr Tusnin, Junqiu Liu,, Tobias Kippenberg

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that chaotic microresonator frequency combs can be used for high-resolution, interference-immune laser ranging, leveraging their intrinsic random amplitude and phase modulation for practical, wideband distance measurements.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method of using chaotic microresonator combs for parallel laser ranging, offering high efficiency, flat spectra, and simplified setup compared to soliton-based systems.
Findings
Achieved cm-scale resolution in object distance measurement.
Utilized 40 comb lines with >1 GHz noise bandwidth for ranging.
Demonstrated interference-immune, massively parallel distance sensing.
Abstract
The transition to chaos is ubiquitous in nonlinear systems ranging from fluid dynamics and superconducting circuits to biological organisms. Optical systems driven out of equilibrium such as lasers and supercontinuum generation exhibit chaotic states of light with fluctuations of both amplitude and phase and can give rise to Levy statistics, turbulence, and rogue waves. Spatio-temporal chaos also occurs in continuous-wave driven photonic chip based Kerr micro-resonators, where it is referred to as chaotic modulation instability. Such modulation instability states have generally been considered impractical for applications, in contrast to their coherent light state counterparts, which include soliton or dark-pulse states. Here we demonstrate that incoherent and chaotic states of light in an optical microresonator can be harnessed to implement unambiguous and interference-immune massively…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Fiber Laser Technologies · Photonic and Optical Devices · Mechanical and Optical Resonators
