DocumentCode
1112066
Title
Electrical mode-hopping noise in external-cavity semiconductor lasers and mode-hopping elimination by a nonoptical control loop
Author
Andrekson, Peter A. ; Alping, Arne
Author_Institution
Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden
Volume
23
Issue
12
fYear
1987
fDate
12/1/1987 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
2078
Lastpage
2083
Abstract
The longitudinal mode-hopping and the associated terminal electrical noise in AlGaAs buried heterostructure lasers in an external-cavity configuration are investigated. It is found that the electrical mode-hopping noise has a
-dependence when two external-cavity modes are involved in the mode-hopping. Furthermore, it is found that the optical feedback can suppress the electrical noise significantly below the noise level of the free-running laser. This corresponds to a reduction of the emission line width which is in agreement with the reduction of the electrical noise level. A novel, nonoptical, scheme for active elimination of mode-hopping attributable to thermal drift or mechanical disturbances in CW-operated external-cavity lasers is also proposed and demonstrated. Using this method, where the electrical noise is used as an error signal in a control loop, long-term single external-cavity mode operation and low electrical noise and optical intensity noise levels were maintained.
-dependence when two external-cavity modes are involved in the mode-hopping. Furthermore, it is found that the optical feedback can suppress the electrical noise significantly below the noise level of the free-running laser. This corresponds to a reduction of the emission line width which is in agreement with the reduction of the electrical noise level. A novel, nonoptical, scheme for active elimination of mode-hopping attributable to thermal drift or mechanical disturbances in CW-operated external-cavity lasers is also proposed and demonstrated. Using this method, where the electrical noise is used as an error signal in a control loop, long-term single external-cavity mode operation and low electrical noise and optical intensity noise levels were maintained.Keywords
CW lasers; Gallium materials/lasers; Laser modes; Laser noise; Laser resonators; Error correction; Laser feedback; Laser modes; Laser noise; Noise level; Optical control; Optical feedback; Optical noise; Semiconductor device noise; Semiconductor lasers;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Quantum Electronics, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9197
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JQE.1987.1073274
Filename
1073274
Link To Document