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research article

Thermally stable access to microresonator solitons via slow pump modulation

Wildi, Thibault
•
Brasch, Victor  
•
Liu, Junqiu  
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September 15, 2019
Optics Letters

Temporal dissipative Kerr solitons (DKSs) in microresonators provide ultra-short optical pulses and low-noise frequency combs with gigahertz to terahertz repetition rates. Owing to their unique properties, they have found application in fields, including optical communications, rapid laser ranging, and optical precision spectroscopy. However, due to the thermal instability encountered when entering the DKS regime, the stable generation of solitons remains challenging for many systems and usually requires rapid actuation of the pump laser detuning, pulsed driving, additional lasers, a particular mode structure and/or active feedback loops to stabilize the system. Here we show that slow pump modulation can remove the thermal instability and enable passively stable soliton states that can be readily accessed via arbitrarily slow laser tuning, thereby greatly reducing the technical complexity of stable DKS generation. (C) 2019 Optical Society of America

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1364/OL.44.004447
Web of Science ID

WOS:000485817500004

Author(s)
Wildi, Thibault
Brasch, Victor  
Liu, Junqiu  
Kippenberg, Tobias J.  
Herr, Tobias  
Date Issued

2019-09-15

Publisher

OPTICAL SOC AMER

Published in
Optics Letters
Volume

44

Issue

18

Start page

4447

End page

4450

Subjects

Optics

•

Optics

•

frequency combs

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LPQM  
Available on Infoscience
October 1, 2019
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/161717
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