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A passively mode-locked fiber laser at 1.54 υm with a fundamental repetition frequency reaching 2 GHz
Published
Author(s)
John Mcferran, Ljerka Nenadovic, William C. Swann, John B. Schlager, Nathan R. Newbury
Abstract
We demonstrate a fundamentally mode-locked fiber laser with a repetition frequency in excess of 2 GHz at a central wavelength of 1.535 υm. Co-doped ytterbium-erbium fiber provides the gain medium for the laser, affording high gain per unit length, while a semiconductor saturable absorber mirror (SAM) provides the pulse shaping mechanism in a standing wave cavity. Results are shown confirming cw mode-locking for 1 GHz and 2 GHz repetition frequency systems. The response of the frequency comb output to pump power variations is shown to follow a single pole response. The timing jitter of a 540 MHz repetion-rate laser has been suppressed to below 100 fs through phase-lead compensated feedback to the pump power. Alternatively, a single comb line of a 850 MHz repetition-rate laser has been phase-locked to a narrow linewidth cw laser with an in-loop phase jitter of 0.06 rad2. The laser design is compatible with low-noise oscillator applications.
Mcferran, J.
, Nenadovic, L.
, Swann, W.
, Schlager, J.
and Newbury, N.
(2007),
A passively mode-locked fiber laser at 1.54 υm with a fundamental repetition frequency reaching 2 GHz, Optics Express, [online], https://tsapps.nist.gov/publication/get_pdf.cfm?pub_id=32743
(Accessed October 21, 2025)