Mean-field equation for phase-modulated optical parametric oscillator
A. D. Sanchez, S. Chaitanya Kumar, M. Ebrahim-Zadeh

TL;DR
This paper introduces a phase-modulated optical parametric oscillator driven by continuous-wave lasers, deriving a mean-field equation that predicts stable femtosecond pulse generation without the need for synchronous pumping, simplifying ultrafast laser design.
Contribution
The authors derive a novel mean-field equation for a cw-driven, phase-modulated OPO that enables stable femtosecond pulses without synchronous pumping, a significant advancement over traditional ultrafast OPOs.
Findings
Predicts stable femtosecond pulses (<200 fs) in normal and anomalous dispersion regimes.
Enables controllable repetition rate via electro-optic modulation frequency.
Simplifies ultrafast OPO architecture by removing the need for mode-locked pump lasers.
Abstract
The widely established techniques for the generation of ultrashort optical pulses rely on passive mode-locking of lasers, with the output pulse duration and emission spectrum determined by the intrinsic lifetime of laser transition in the gain medium. Due to the instantaneous nature of nonlinear gain, optical parametric oscillators (OPOs) are capable of generating optical radiation in all time scales from continuous-wave (cw) to ultrashort femtosecond regime, if driven by laser pump sources in the corresponding time domain. In the ultrashort time scale, operation of OPOs conventionally relies on mode-locked pump lasers, with the concomitant disadvantages of large footprint and high cost. At the same time, the lack of gain storage mandates the use of synchronous pumping, resulting in increased complexity. In this paper, we present the concept of phase-modulated OPO driven by cw pump…
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