Flattening laser frequency comb spectra with a high dynamic range, broadband spectral shaper on-a-chip
Nemanja Jovanovic, Pradip Gatkine, Boqiang Shen, Maodong Gao, Nick, Cvetojevic, Katarzyna Lawniczuk, Ronald Broeke, Charles Beichman, Stephanie, Leifer, Jeffery Jewell, Gautam Vasisht, and Dimitri Mawet

TL;DR
This paper introduces an all-photonic, chip-scale spectral shaper that flattens laser frequency comb spectra with high dynamic range, offering a compact alternative to bulk optics for astronomical calibration.
Contribution
The authors present a silicon nitride chip-based spectral shaper capable of significantly flattening laser comb spectra, surpassing traditional spatial light modulators in dynamic range and compactness.
Findings
Achieved nearly 40 dB spectral modulation range.
Reduced spectral variation to ~3 dB with a superluminescent diode.
Managed to reduce modulation to 5 dB on a laser frequency comb.
Abstract
Spectral shaping is critical to many fields of science. In astronomy for example, the detection of exoplanets via the Doppler effect hinges on the ability to calibrate a high resolution spectrograph. Laser frequency combs can be used for this, but the wildly varying intensity across the spectrum can make it impossible to optimally utilize the entire comb, leading to a reduced overall precision of calibration. To circumvent this, astronomical applications of laser frequency combs rely on a bulk optic setup which can flatten the output spectrum before sending it to the spectrograph. Such flatteners require complex and expensive optical elements like spatial light modulators and have non-negligible bench top footprints. Here we present an alternative in the form of an all-photonic spectral shaper that can be used to flatten the spectrum of a laser frequency comb. The device consists of a…
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