Ultra-precise, sub-picometer tunable free spectral range in a parabolic microresonator induced by optical fiber bending
Manuel Crespo-Ballesteros, Misha Sumetsky

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel method to fabricate a SNAP microresonator with a parabolic profile on silica fibers, achieving ultra-precise, tunable free spectral range with high repeatability for advanced photonic applications.
Contribution
A new fiber bending technique to produce a parabolic SNAP microresonator with highly uniform and tunable free spectral range across multiple modes.
Findings
Achieved a FSR as narrow as 1 pm over 45 modes.
Demonstrated continuous FSR tuning from 1.09 pm to 1.72 pm with high precision.
High repeatability of FSR tuning over multiple cycles.
Abstract
Surface Nanoscale Axial Photonic (SNAP) microresonators are fabricated on silica optical fibers, leveraging silica's outstanding material and mechanical properties. These properties allow for precise control over the microresonator dimension, shape, and mode structure, a key feature for reconfigurable photonic circuits. Such circuits find applications in high-speed communications, optical computing, and optical frequency combs (OFC). However, consistently producing SNAP microresonators with equally spaced eigenmodes has remained challenging. In this study, we introduce a method to create a SNAP microresonator with a parabolic profile. We accomplish this by bending a silica optical fiber in a controlled manner using two linear stages. This approach achieves a uniform free spectral range (FSR) as narrow as 1 pm across more than 45 modes. We further demonstrate that the FSR of the SNAP…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhotonic and Optical Devices · Advanced Fiber Laser Technologies · Mechanical and Optical Resonators
