Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Search Publications by:

Search Title, Abstract, Conference, Citation, Keyword or Author
Displaying 276 - 300 of 469

Towards a Low-Jitter 10 GHz Pulsed Source with an Optical Frequency Comb Generator

June 9, 2008
Author(s)
Shijun Xiao, Leo W. Hollberg, Nathan R. Newbury, Scott A. Diddams
We demonstrate low residual timing jitter of 10 GHz pulses from a 1.55 m optical frequency comb generator based on a doubly-resonant electro-optic modulator. The comb spectral phase is shown to be linear for each sideband but of different slopes. The

High resolution spectroscopy using fiber-laser frequency combs

June 8, 2008
Author(s)
Ian R. Coddington, William C. Swann, Nathan R. Newbury
The output of a femtosecond fiber laser can be both spectrally broadened and stabilized, thereby providing a broadband coherent source in the near infrared. In the frequency domain, the result is a frequency comb with frequency stabilities at the

Broadband, frequency comb spectroscopy

May 4, 2008
Author(s)
Ian R. Coddington, William C. Swann, Nathan R. Newbury
A stabilized frequency comb provides a broadband array of highly resolved comb lines. Using a multiheterodyne technique, we measure the amplitude and phase of every comb line, allowing for massively parallel, high-resolution spectroscopy.

Practical performance limits on optical frequency transfer over fiber optic links

May 4, 2008
Author(s)
Paul A. Williams, William C. Swann, Nathan R. Newbury
We present theory and experiment quantifying the limitations to stable transport of optical frequencies over optical fiber. These are fundamental fiber noise, propagation delay, bidirectional propagation and system noise in the measurement interferometers.

Frequency ratio of Al + and Hg + single-ion optical clocks; metrology at the 17th decimal place

March 6, 2008
Author(s)
Till P. Rosenband, David Hume, P. O. Schmidt, Chin-Wen Chou, Anders Brusch, Luca Lorini, Windell Oskay, Robert E. Drullinger, Tara M. Fortier, Jason Stalnaker, Scott A. Diddams, Nathan R. Newbury, W Swann, Wayne M. Itano, David J. Wineland, James C. Bergquist
We report the frequency ratio of the two most accurate and stable atomic clocks with a total fractional uncertainty of 5.2 X 10 -17 . This frequency ratio is the best-known physical constant that is not a simple integer. Repeated measurements during the

Fiber lasers for frequency standards in optical communications

February 24, 2008
Author(s)
Nathan R. Newbury, William C. Swann, Ian R. Coddington, Paul A. Williams
Optical light with millihertz relative frequency stabilities and subfemtosecond timing jitter can be produced from stabilized cw or mode-locked fiber lasers. We will discuss the generation, fiber-optic distribution and some applications of these coherent

Coherent, multiheterodyne spectroscopy using stabilized optical frequency combs

January 2, 2008
Author(s)
Ian R. Coddington, William C. Swann, Nathan R. Newbury
The broadband, coherent nature of narrow-linewidth fiber frequency combs is exploited to measure the full complex spectrum of a molecular gas through multiheterodyne spectroscopy. We measure the absorption and phase shift experienced by each of 155 000

Coherent transfer of an optical carrier over 251 km

October 15, 2007
Author(s)
Nathan R. Newbury, Paul A. Williams, William C. Swann
We transfer of an optical frequency over 251 km of optical fiber with a residual instability of 6×10 -19 at 100 s. This instability and the associated timing jitter are limited fundamentally by the noise on the optical fiber and link length. We give a

Narrow linewidth fiber laser frequency combs

October 15, 2007
Author(s)
William C. Swann, Ian R. Coddington, John Mcferran, Nathan R. Newbury
Fiber laser frequency combs can provide a series of optical lines that span the spectrum from 1 to 2 υm. By tightly locking the frequency comb to an optical reference, it is possible for these comb lines to exhibit residual linewidths below 1 Hz and