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Mirrorless optical parametric oscillator

Abstract

Parametric interaction of counterpropagating photons has the unique property of automatically establishing distributed feedback and thus realizing novel sources of coherent and tunable radiation, such as mirrorless optical parametric oscillators. This device does not require alignment or any optical components other than the second-order nonlinear medium itself1. Here we present the first experimental demonstration of such an oscillator, which was made feasible by quasi phase-matching in a nonlinear photonic structure with submicrometre periodicity. This type of oscillator has been extensively discussed as a theoretical possibility1,2,3,4,5. It generates signal and idler waves in the near- and mid-infrared, respectively, and exhibits unique and useful spectral properties. The oscillator signal is essentially a wavelength-shifted replica of the pump spectrum, and the bandwidth of the idler is two orders of magnitude narrower than that of the pump. It also has very low output wavelength sensitivity to temperature variations.

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Figure 1: Nonlinear material for a MOPO.
Figure 2: Conversion efficiency and energy dependencies.
Figure 3: Measured dependence of the signal (blue squares) and the idler (red circles) wavelength on the wavelength of the pump.
Figure 4: Pump and signal spectra.

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Acknowledgements

The Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation, Göran Gustafsson Foundation and Carl Tryggers Stiftelse are acknowledged for their generous support. F. Laurell is thanked for fruitful discussions.

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Contributions

C.C. fabricated the PPKTP sample, V.P. performed the theoretical calculations, and both C.C. and V.P. performed the experiments and wrote the manuscript.

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Correspondence to Carlota Canalias.

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The authors declare no competing financial interests.

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Canalias, C., Pasiskevicius, V. Mirrorless optical parametric oscillator. Nature Photon 1, 459–462 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1038/nphoton.2007.137

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nphoton.2007.137

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