Scalable single-mode Berkeley Surface Emitting Lasers
Rushin Contractor, Wanwoo Noh, Walid Redjem, Boubacar Kante

TL;DR
This paper introduces Berkeley Surface Emitting Lasers (BerkSELs), a new class of large-scale, single-mode lasers based on open-Dirac electromagnetic apertures that leverage unique cavity-mode scaling properties.
Contribution
It presents a novel cavity design exploiting linear dispersion to achieve scale-invariant, single-mode operation in large apertures, demonstrated experimentally with topologically singular far-field emission.
Findings
Single-mode operation maintained at large cavity sizes.
Experimental validation of scale-invariant single-mode lasing.
Far-field emission exhibits a topological charge two singularity.
Abstract
The scaling of electromagnetic apertures is a long-standing question that has been investigated for at least six decades but has still not been resolved [1-5]. The size of single aperture cavities, bounded by the existence of higher-order transverse modes, fundamentally limits the power emitted by single-mode lasers or the brightness of quantum light sources. The free-spectral range of existing electromagnetic apertures goes to zero when the size of the aperture increases, and the demonstration of scale-invariant apertures or lasers has remained elusive. Here, we report open-Dirac electromagnetic apertures that exploit a subtle cavity-mode-dependent scaling of losses in reciprocal space. For cavities with a quadratic dispersion, the complex frequencies of modes converge towards each other with the size of cavities, making cavities invariably multimode. Surprisingly, for a class of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhotonic and Optical Devices · Semiconductor Lasers and Optical Devices · Mechanical and Optical Resonators
