Cavity-enhanced frequency mixer for classical and quantum applications
11762262 · 2023-09-19
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G02F1/3558
PHYSICS
G02F1/3503
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
A cavity-enhanced frequency mixer includes an input optical fiber, a waveguide, and an output optical fiber. The waveguide has an input end and an output end, the input end is connected to the input optical fiber, and a surface of the input end of the waveguide is coated with a highly reflective coating. The output optical fiber is formed with a fiber Bragg grating structure. The highly reflective coating and the fiber Bragg grating structure form a pair of reflective surfaces for resonant optical parametric oscillation under a low threshold situation, so that one of the beams generated by the input beam is reflected inside the partially reflective surfaces. Operated above a pump power threshold, the cavity-enhanced frequency mixer is tantamount to a compact, low-power budget optical parametric oscillator, while below the pump power threshold, it is a bright, compact, single-mode and narrow linewidth single-photon source.
Claims
1. A cavity-enhanced frequency mixer, comprising: an input optical fiber extended along a lengthwise direction, and arranged to receive an input beam; a waveguide, for nonlinear wavelength conversion, wherein the waveguide has an input end and an output end, the input end of the waveguide is connected to the input optical fiber to receive the input beam, and a surface of the input end of the waveguide is coated with a reflective coating; and an output optical fiber, located on one side of the waveguide opposite to the input optical fiber, wherein the output optical fiber is formed with a Fiber Bragg Grating (FBG) structure therein; wherein the reflective coating and the FBG structure form a pair of reflective surfaces for singly resonant optical parametric oscillation under a low threshold situation, a condition of the low threshold situation is a pump power threshold of the input beam, so that a first beam generated by the input beam is reflected there between and is then outputted by the output optical fiber as an output beam, and a second beam generated by the input beam directly passes through the waveguide without reflection; wherein when the pump power of the input beam operates below the pump power threshold, the cavity-enhanced frequency mixer is in quantum application, and when the pump power of the input beam operates above the pump power threshold, the cavity-enhanced frequency mixer is in classical application.
2. The cavity-enhanced frequency mixer according to claim 1, wherein the first beam is an idler beam, and the second beam is a signal beam.
3. The cavity-enhanced frequency mixer according to claim 1, wherein the first beam is a signal beam, and the second beam is an idler beam.
4. The cavity-enhanced frequency mixer according to claim 1, wherein the waveguide and the output optical fiber form a resonant cavity either; for the first beam only to resonate within the waveguide; or for the second beam only to resonate within the waveguide.
5. The cavity-enhanced frequency mixer according to claim 1, wherein the waveguide is composed of Periodically Poled Lithium Niobate (PPLN) material or Periodically Poled Lithium Tantalate (PPLT) material.
6. The cavity-enhanced frequency mixer according to claim 5, wherein the waveguide comprises a periodical poled structure based on a target angular frequency of the output beam.
7. The cavity-enhanced frequency mixer according to claim 6, wherein the waveguide is composed of two different sections arranged alternatively along the lengthwise direction with 180° phase shift.
8. The cavity-enhanced frequency mixer according to claim 1, further comprising a first ferrule having a through hole, wherein the input optical fiber is fixed to the waveguide via the through hole of the first ferrule.
9. The cavity-enhanced frequency mixer according to claim 8, further comprising a second ferrule having a through hole, wherein the output optical fiber is fixed to the waveguide via the through hole of the second ferrule.
10. The cavity-enhanced frequency mixer according to claim 1, wherein the second beam directly passing through the waveguide is outputted by the output optical fiber with the first beam as the output beam.
11. The cavity-enhanced frequency mixer according to claim 1, wherein the input optical fiber is connected to a laser pump source that generates the input beam, and the power of the first beam and the power of the second beam are adjustable according to the power of the laser pump source.
12. The cavity-enhanced frequency mixer according to claim 1, wherein a wavelength of the first beam and a wavelength of the second beam are tunable according to the FBG's Bragg wavelength, the temperature-driven QPM conditions, and the input beam's wavelength.
13. The cavity-enhanced frequency mixer according to claim 1, further comprising a Dichroic filter located between the waveguide and the output optical fiber, the Dichroic filter is arranged to filter out the second beam and output the first beam to the output optical fiber.
14. The cavity-enhanced frequency mixer according to claim 1, further comprising a lens located between the waveguide and the output optical fiber, wherein the lens is arranged to couple light outputted from the waveguide.
15. The cavity-enhanced frequency mixer according to claim 1, wherein the pump power threshold is lower than 1 watt.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(7) Following examples are used to describe the present invention, but they are only for illustrative objectives. Those skilled in the art may readily observe that various modifications and alterations of the device and method may be made without departing from the spirit and the scope of the invention. Hence, the claimed scope of the present disclosure should be based on the claims defined hereinafter. Throughout specification and the claims, except for those further defined in the content, the meaning of the terms “a” and “the” may include the meaning of “one or at least one” element or component. Moreover, throughout the specification and claims, the singular terms may also refer to plural elements or components, unless the context clearly specifies that the plural usage is excluded. In the whole specification and claims, unless the content clearly specifies the meaning of some terms, the meaning of the term “wherein” includes the meaning of in/on something/somewhere”. The meaning of each term used in the present claims and specification refers to a usual meaning known to one skilled in the art unless the meaning is additionally annotated. Some terms used to describe the present invention will be discussed to guide practitioners to realize the present invention. Further, various embodiments in the specification are not meant to limit the claimed scope of the present invention.
(8) Furthermore, it can be understood that the terms “comprising,” “including,” “having,” “containing,” and “involving” are open-ended terms, which refer to “may include but is not limited to.” In addition, each of the embodiments or claims of the present invention is not necessary to achieve all possible advantages and features. Further, the abstract and title of the present invention is used to assist the patent searching, rather than limiting the claimed scope of the present invention.
(9) In the embodiments described below, the FBG within the output fiber is connected to the waveguide output facet through direct contact or free space coupling with filter/lens, the reflective coating and the FBG form a pair of reflective surfaces.
(10) Please refer to
(11) According to an embodiment of the present invention, the input optical fiber 111 may be connected to a laser pump source (not shown) that generates the input beam (i.e. pumped-in beam L.sub.pump), and the power of the pumped-in beam L.sub.pump is adjustable according to the power of the laser pump source. For optically-controlled quantum memories, in which the SPDC′ signal photons are read by the memory and the SPDC's idler photons propagate inside the optical fiber, useful pump wavelengths cover the entire visible light spectrum (e.g, 352, 532, 780 nm). Such scheme includes the conversion of a non-deterministic single-photon (SP) source (like those based on SPDC) into a deterministic one; the photon propagating in the fiber (or possibly free propagating) heralds the storage of its sibling by the memory, which can then be advantageously used as on-demand SP sources for linear optical quantum computing (LOQC). Another implementation are for the quantum repeaters required to mitigate losses in long-distance quantum communication; signal and idler are first entangled and memories distributed along the way secure the information via entanglement swapping (i.e., the quantum teleportation of the entanglement). In yet another implementation, storing long-lived entanglement benefits enhanced sensing and metrology. Pumps lasing in the near-IR, e.g., 1064 nm, are suitable for spectroscopy in the MIR. In the above structure, the overall transmission path contains no free-space transmissions. For example, no gap is formed between optical elements. In other words, the present invention provides an all-fiber structure without exposing the signal to the free space.
(12) More specifically, please refer to
(13) Refer to
(14) As long as similar optical effects can be achieved, the aforementioned PPLN can be replaced with other materials, such as Periodically Poled Lithium Tantalate (PPLT). With a suitable range of poling periods, output wavelengths from 700 nm to 5000 nm can be generated in the PPLN material. Specifically, the waveguide 130 comprises a periodical poled structure based on the targeted angular frequencies of the output beam (e.g., a combination of the idler beam L.sub.idler and the signal beam L.sub.signal) and may be composed of two different sections (indicated by the numerals 130_1 and 130_2) arranged alternatively along the lengthwise direction with 180° phase shift.
(15) The optical characteristics of the waveguide 130 are able to convert the pumped-in beam L.sub.pump with the angular frequency φ.sub.P into the aforementioned idler beam L.sub.idler with the angular frequency ω.sub.i and the signal beam L.sub.signal with the angular frequency φ.sub.S. The relationship between these three frequencies can be represented by: ω.sub.P=ω.sub.S±ω.sub.i.
(16) The output optical fiber 140 is located on the output side of the waveguide 130, so that the reflective coating 136 of the waveguide 130 and the FBG 145 function as two highly reflective surfaces to establish the optical parameter oscillation of the OPO 100 under a low threshold situation. In one example, the idler beam L.sub.idler with an angular frequency φ.sub.i can be reflected between the reflective coating 136 and the FBG 145. The output end of the output optical fiber 140 is arranged to output the combination of the idler beam L.sub.idler and the signal beam L.sub.signal as the output beam.
(17) While the present invention can be set to output the signal beam L.sub.signal and retain the idler beam L.sub.idler as the resonant beam as shown in
(18) Please refer to
(19) In the above embodiment, the present invention provides an all-fiber (no free space) solution that allows the formation of optical parametric oscillations under the low threshold situation (a condition of the low threshold situation is a pump power threshold of the input beam, i.e., the pump power threshold is lower than 1 watt). Compared with the conventional solid-state structures, the structure provided by the present invention is more stable and is even operable under degenerated bands. In addition, due to the design of the two reflective surfaces (i.e. the reflective coatings 136 and the FBG 145), the present invention does not need additional lens to reach the desired reflections, thereby reducing the overall cost. In addition, the wavelength of the output beam can be adjusted by a proper waveguide design and the adjustment of the pump wavelength.
(20) Despite the advantages provided by the above all-fiber (no free space), the present invention is not limited thereto. A free-space solution can be also applied when propagation conditions inside the FBG can't be satisfied for both signal and idler. Please refer to
(21) The light outputted from the waveguide 130 is firstly processed by the lens 160, and then by the Dichroic filter 170. The lens 160 is located between the waveguide 130 and the output optical fiber 140, and is arranged to couple (i.e. concentrate) the light outputted from the waveguide 130. The Dichroic filter 170 is located between the waveguide 130 and the output optical fiber 140, the Dichroic filter 170 is arranged to filter out the idler beam L.sub.idler (i.e. the second beam), and output the signal beam L.sub.signal (i.e. the first beam). The signal beam L.sub.signal which passes through the Dichroic filter 170 is outputted to the output optical fiber 140 formed with the FBG structure 145 under the low threshold situation.
(22) While the present invention can be set to output the signal beam L.sub.signal while the idler beam L.sub.idler is filtered out as shown in
(23) According to the above, when the pump power of the input beam operates below the pump power threshold, the OPO is in quantum application, while when the pump power of the input beam operates above the pump power threshold, the OPO is in classical application.