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research article

Bringing short-lived dissipative Kerr soliton states in microresonators into a steady state

Brasch, Victor  
•
Geiselmann, Michael  
•
Pfeiffer, Martin H. P.  
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2016
Optics Express

Dissipative Kerr solitons have recently been generated in optical microresonators, enabling ultrashort optical pulses at microwave repetition rates, that constitute coherent and numerically predictable Kerr frequency combs. However, the seeding and excitation of the temporal solitons is associated with changes in the intracavity power that can lead to large thermal resonance shifts and render the soliton states in most commonly used resonator platforms short lived. Here we describe a "power kicking" method to overcome this instability by modulating the power of the pump laser. With this method also initially very short-lived (of the order of 100 ns) soliton states can be brought into a steady state in contrast to techniques reported earlier which relied on an adjustment of the laser scan speed only. Once the soliton state is in a steady state it can persist for hours and is thermally self-locked. Published by The Optical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1364/Oe.24.029312
Web of Science ID

WOS:000389763000105

Author(s)
Brasch, Victor  
Geiselmann, Michael  
Pfeiffer, Martin H. P.  
Kippenberg, Tobias J.  
Date Issued

2016

Publisher

Optical Society of America

Published in
Optics Express
Volume

24

Issue

25

Start page

29313

End page

29321

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LPQM  
Available on Infoscience
January 24, 2017
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/133528
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