JOURNAL ARTICLE

Kerr-Nonlinearity-Induced Mode-Splitting in Optical Microresonators

Abstract

The Kerr effect in optical microresonators plays an important role for integrated photonic devices and enables third harmonic generation, four-wave mixing, and the generation of microresonator-based frequency combs. Here we experimentally demonstrate that the Kerr nonlinearity can split ultra-high-Q microresonator resonances for two continuous-wave lasers. The resonance splitting is induced by self- and cross-phase modulation and counterintuitively enables two lasers at different wavelengths to be simultaneously resonant in the same microresonator mode. We develop a pump-probe spectroscopy scheme that allows us to measure power dependent resonance splittings of up to 35 cavity linewidths (corresponding to 52 MHz) at 10 mW of pump power. The required power to split the resonance by one cavity linewidth is only 286 μW. In addition, we demonstrate threefold resonance splitting when taking into account four-wave mixing and two counterpropagating probe lasers. These Kerr splittings are of interest for applications that require two resonances at optically controlled offsets, e.g., for optomechanical coupling to phonon modes, optical memories, and precisely adjustable spectral filters.

Keywords:
Laser linewidth Resonance (particle physics) Physics Four-wave mixing Laser Kerr effect Optics Nonlinear optics Mixing (physics) Resonator Coupling (piping) Photonics Optoelectronics Optical pumping Optical cavity Wavelength Nonlinear system Atomic physics Materials science Quantum mechanics

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24
Cited By
2.29
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
36
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0.89
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Citation History

Topics

Advanced Fiber Laser Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Physics and Astronomy →  Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
Photonic and Optical Devices
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Mechanical and Optical Resonators
Physical Sciences →  Physics and Astronomy →  Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
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