Reduction of Flicker Phase Noise in High-Speed Photodetectors under Ultrashort Pulse Illumination

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Abstract

High-fidelity photodetection enables the transfer of the low noise inherent to optical oscillators to the microwave domain. However, when photodetecting optical signals of the highest timing stability, photodiode flicker (1/f) noise can dominate the resulting timing jitter at timescales longer than ∼1 ms. With the goal of improving femtosecond-level timing fidelity when transferring from the optical to microwave domain, we vary the duty cycle of a train of optical pulses and show that the photodetector flicker phase noise on a photonically generated 1 GHz microwave signal can be reduced by ∼10 dB under ultrashort pulse illumination, reaching as low as -140/f dBc/Hz. In addition, a strong correlation between amplitude and phase flicker noise is found, implying a single baseband noise source can modulate both quadratures of the microwave carrier. These findings expand the limits of the ultimate timing stability that can be transferred from optics to electronics.

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APA

Lee, D., Nakamura, T., Zang, J., Campbell, J., Diddams, S., & Quinlan, F. (2021). Reduction of Flicker Phase Noise in High-Speed Photodetectors under Ultrashort Pulse Illumination. IEEE Photonics Journal, 13(3). https://doi.org/10.1109/JPHOT.2021.3075381

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