Direct Kerr frequency comb atomic spectroscopy and stabilization

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Abstract

Microresonator-based soliton frequency combs, microcombs, have recently emerged to offer low-noise, photonicchip sources for applications, spanning from timekeeping to optical-frequency synthesis and ranging. Broad optical bandwidth, brightness, coherence, and frequency stability have made frequency combs important to directly probe atoms and molecules, especially in trace gas detection, multiphoton light-atom interactions, and spectroscopy in the extreme ultraviolet. Here, we explore direct microcomb atomic spectroscopy, using a cascaded, two-photon 1529-nm atomic transition in a rubidium micromachined cell. Fine and simultaneous repetition rate and carrier-envelope offset frequency control of the soliton enables direct sub-Doppler and hyperfine spectroscopy. Moreover, the entire set of microcomb modes are stabilized to this atomic transition, yielding absolute optical-frequency fluctuations at the kilohertz level over a few seconds and <1-MHz day-to-day accuracy. Our work demonstrates direct atomic spectroscopy with Kerr microcombs and provides an atomic-stabilized microcomb laser source, operating across the telecom band for sensing, dimensional metrology, and communication.

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Stern, L., Stone, J. R., Kang, S., Cole, D. C., Suh, M. G., Fredrick, C., … Papp, S. B. (2020). Direct Kerr frequency comb atomic spectroscopy and stabilization. Science Advances, 6(9). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aax6230

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