Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Generation of ultrastable microwaves via optical frequency division

2011; Nature Portfolio; Volume: 5; Issue: 7 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1038/nphoton.2011.121

ISSN

1749-4893

Autores

Tara M. Fortier, Matthew S. Kirchner, Franklyn Quinlan, Jennifer A. Taylor, Jonas Bergquist, T. Rosenband, N. Lemke, Andrew D. Ludlow, Yina Jiang, C. W. Oates, Scott A. Diddams,

Tópico(s)

Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates

Resumo

There has been increased interest in the use and manipulation of optical fields to address challenging problems that have traditionally been approached with microwave electronics. Some examples that benefit from the low transmission loss, agile modulation and large bandwidths accessible with coherent optical systems include signal distribution, arbitrary waveform generation, and novel imaging. We extend these advantages to demonstrate a microwave generator based on a high-Q optical resonator and a frequency comb functioning as an optical-to-microwave divider. This provides a 10 GHz electrical signal with fractional frequency instability <8e-16 at 1 s, a value comparable to that produced by the best microwave oscillators, but without the need for cryogenic temperatures. Such a low-noise source can benefit radar systems, improve the bandwidth and resolution of communications and digital sampling systems, and be valuable for large baseline interferometry, precision spectroscopy and the realization of atomic time.

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