Optical wavelength conversion via optomechanical coupling in a silica resonator

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Abstract

In an optomechanical resonator, an optically active mechanical mode can couple to any of the optical resonances via radiation pressure. This unique property can enable a remarkable phenomenon: conversion of optical fields via optomechanical coupling between vastly different wavelengths. Here we expand an earlier experimental study [Science 338, 1609 (2012)] on classical wavelength conversion of coherent optical fields by coupling two optical modes to a mechanical breathing mode in a silica resonator. Heterodyne detection of the converted optical fields shows that the wavelength conversion process is coherent and bidirectional. The conversion efficiency obtained features a distinct saturation behavior that arises from optomechanical impedance matching. A measurement of the coherent mechanical excitation involved in the wave-length conversion process also provides additional insight on the underlying optomechanical interactions.

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Dong, C., Fiore, V., Kuzyk, M. C., Tian, L., & Wang, H. (2015). Optical wavelength conversion via optomechanical coupling in a silica resonator. Annalen Der Physik, 527(1–2), 100–106. https://doi.org/10.1002/andp.201400110

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