Second-harmonic stabilization of a bulk photonic resonator
Lindell M. Williams, Grant M. Brodnik, Scott B. Papp

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates second-harmonic stabilization of a high-Q photonic resonator, enabling accurate inference of laser frequency drift and enhancing long-term stability for compact frequency references.
Contribution
It introduces a novel second-harmonic stabilization technique that maps laser frequency drift to an electronic signal using an ultra-high-Q resonator.
Findings
f_SH accurately proxies laser frequency drift
Technique enhances long-term laser stability
Sensitivity limited by laser locking and material properties
Abstract
The resonant modes of optical cavities provide a powerful resource for laser-frequency stabilization, underpinning high-precision metrology and coherent signal generation. Photonic resonators in which the optical mode propagates through material offer a compact alternative to vacuum Fabry-Perot cavity systems, but their performance is limited by sensitivity of the material to the ambient environment. In this work, we explore second-harmonic (SH) stabilization, which exploits the interplay of a dispersive mode structure against the strict energy conservation of second-harmonic generation. Operationally, we use two, 1550 nm lasers to PDH-detect octave-spaced resonant modes of an ultra-high-Q photonic resonator with one laser frequency-doubled to 775 nm. Under SH stabilization, the microwave frequency offset between the 1550 nm lasers, which we refer to as the SH signal () maps the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Fiber Laser Technologies · Advanced Frequency and Time Standards · Advanced Photonic Communication Systems
