Vernier spectrometer using counterpropagating soliton microcombs

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Abstract

Determination of laser frequency with high resolution under continuous and abrupt tuning conditions is important for sensing, spectroscopy, and communications. We show that a single microresonator provides rapid and broadband measurement of optical frequencies with a relative frequency precision comparable to that of conventional dual-frequency comb systems. Dual-locked counterpropagating solitons having slightly different repetition rates were used to implement a vernier spectrometer, which enabled characterization of laser tuning rates as high as 10 terahertz per second, broadly step-tuned lasers, multiline laser spectra, and molecular absorption lines. Besides providing a considerable technical simplification through the dual-locked solitons and enhanced capability for measurement of arbitrarily tuned sources, our results reveal possibilities for chip-scale spectrometers that exceed the performance of tabletop grating and interferometer-based devices.

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Yang, Q. F., Shen, B., Wang, H., Tran, M., Zhang, Z., Yang, K. Y., … Vahala, K. (2019). Vernier spectrometer using counterpropagating soliton microcombs. Science, 363(6430), 965–968. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aaw2317

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