Doing the Bump: Generating Precise Wavelengths of Visible Laser Light

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Doing the Bump: Generating Precise Wavelengths of Visible Laser Light

NIST scientists perfect miniaturized technique

“In our previous experiments, we reached the general range of a wavelength of interest, but for many applications that isn’t good enough. You really have to nail the wavelength to a high degree of accuracy,” says Stone. “We now achieve this accuracy by incorporating a periodic arrangement of corrugations on a microring resonator.”

Published: Monday, February 12, 2024 – 12:02

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In their new study, the researchers designed a microring whose dimensions, without corrugations, would not have allowed the photons to resonate in the ring and produce new wavelengths because the process would not have conserved energy.

The researchers described their work online in the Nov. 16, 2023, issue of Nature Photonics.

However, when the team sculpted the ring with tiny, periodic corrugations, altering its dimensions, it allowed OPO to proceed, transforming the NIR laser light into a specific wavelength of visible light plus one other, much longer, wavelength. These OPO-generated colors, unlike those previously created by smooth microrings, can be precisely controlled by the spacing and width of the bumps.

Ideally, the wavelengths should be generated in a compact device, such as a photonic chip, so that quantum sensors and optical atomic clocks can be deployed outside the laboratory, no longer tethered to bulky optical equipment.

As a result, researchers have had to fabricate as many as 100 of the silicon nitride microrings to be confident that at least some would have the right dimensions to generate the target wavelength. But even that laborious measure does not guarantee success.

Now, Srinivasan and his collaborators, led by Jordan Stone of JQI, have demonstrated that by introducing imperfections—tiny, periodic corrugations or bumps—along the surface of a microresonator, they can select a specific output wavelength of visible light to an accuracy of 99.7%. With improvements, Stone says, the technique should produce visible-light wavelengths accurate to better than 99.9% of their target values, a requirement for powering optical atomic clocks and other high-precision devices.

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The energy carried by two near-infrared photons must equal the sum of the energy carried by a single photon from each of the two output wavelengths. Credit: S. Kelley/NIST

In previous experiments, NIST researchers have used ring microresonators to transform near-infrared laser light into a combination of longer and shorter wavelengths. Credit: S. Kelley/NIST

By slightly altering the wavelength of the infrared laser that drives the OPO process, any imperfections in the corrugations can be compensated for, Stone says.

In addition, each of the input and output wavelengths must correspond to one of the resonant wavelengths permitted by the dimensions of the microring, just as the length of a tuning fork determines the one specific note at which it resonates.

The corrugations act like tiny mirrors, collectively reflecting back and forth visible light racing around the ring—but only for one particular wavelength. The reflections result in two identical waves traveling around the ring in opposite directions. Inside the ring, the counterpropagating waves interfere with each other to create a pattern known as a standing wave—a waveform whose peaks remain fixed at a particular point in space as the wave vibrates, like a plucked guitar string.

This translates into a shift toward a longer or shorter wavelength, depending on whether the standing wave interacts more with the peaks or troughs of the corrugations. In both cases, the magnitude of the shift is determined by the height of the bump. Because the bumps only act as a mirror for a specific wavelength of light, the approach guarantees that when OPO occurs, the generated signal wave has the exact desired wavelength.

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In theory, by choosing a particular radius, width, and height of the resonator—which determine the properties of the light that can resonate in the ring—researchers can select any among a rainbow of colors possible with the technique. In practice, however, the method, known as optical parametric oscillation (OPO), is not always precise. Even deviations as small as a few nanometers (billionths of a meter) from the specified dimensions of the microring produce visible-light colors that differ significantly from the desired output wavelength.

The new NIST design incorporates tiny corrugations, or bumps, into the ring. Collectively, the bumps act like tiny mirrors, reflecting a particular wavelength of visible light so that it circulates in both directions around the ring. The wavelength of visible light is exactly twice the periodicity of the bumps, which means that designs faithfully produce the desired color. Credit: S. Kelley/NIST

Published Nov. 28, 2023, on the NIST blog.