| Literature DB >> 30093636 |
Kemal Şafak1,2, Ming Xin3,4, Michael Y Peng5, Franz X Kärtner1,5,6.
Abstract
Filming atoms in motion with sub-atomic spatiotemporal resolution is one of the distinguished scientific endeavors of our time. Newly emerging X-ray laser facilities are the most likely candidates to enable such a detailed gazing of atoms due to their angstrom-level radiation wavelength. To provide the necessary temporal resolution, numerous mode-locked lasers must be synchronized with ultra-high precision across kilometer-distances. Here, we demonstrate a metronome synchronizing a network of pulsed-lasers operating at different center wavelengths and different repetition rates over 4.7-km distance. The network achieves a record-low timing drift of 0.6 fs RMS measured with 2-Hz sampling over 40 h. Short-term stability measurements show an out-of-loop timing jitter of only 1.3 fs RMS integrated from 1 Hz to 1 MHz. To validate the network performance, we present a comprehensive noise analysis based on the feedback flow between the setup elements. Our analysis identifies nine uncorrelated noise sources, out of which the slave laser's inherent jitter dominates with 1.26 fs RMS. This suggests that the timing precision of the network is not limited by the synchronization technique, and so could be much further improved by developing lasers with lower inherent noise.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30093636 PMCID: PMC6085312 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-30348-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Layout of a synchronous mode-locked laser network with sub-femtosecond daily drift. Temporal duration and periodicity of the red and green pulses are not to scale with the time axes. The time axes under the pulses are in logarithmic scale, whereas the time axes in the middle are in linear scale on the order of femtoseconds. Orange filled circles symbolize timing detectors (TD).
Figure 2(a) Experimental setup of the synchronous mode-locked laser network. All BOCs are symbolized with “lock symbols” shown under their abbreviations. A sealed lock refers to an in-loop detector; whereas an open lock corresponds to an out-of-loop detector. (b) Detailed schematics of the individual elements. Abbreviations: SH-BOC: second-harmonic balanced optical cross-correlator; SF-BOC: sum-frequency BOC; PLL: phase-locked loop; RF-S: RF synthesizer; FC: fiber collimator; PRM: partially reflecting mirror; PBS: polarization beam splitter; λ/2: half-wave plate; DBS: dichroic beam splitter; FL: focus lens; PPKTP: periodically poled potassium titanyl phosphate crystal; DC: dichroic coating; BPD: balanced photodetector; PD: photodetector; AMP: voltage amplifier; BPF: 1.3-GHz electronic bandpass filter; DBC: dichroic beam combiner; NBS: neutral 50:50 beam splitter; FS: fused-silica plate; BBO: barium borate crystal; IF: interference filter; MD: motorized delay; PM-FS: polarization-maintaining fiber stretcher; PM-DCF: PM dispersion-compensated fiber; Bi-EDFA: PM bi-directional erbium doped fiber amplifier.
Figure 3Experimental results of the synchronous mode-locked laser network. (a) Long-term performance; top graph shows the relative timing drift data sampled at 2 Hz and underneath is the relative timing instability vs. averaging time. Please note, that the measurement noise below 1 Hz is only ~0.8 as RMS (see Methods section). (b) Short-term performance above 1 Hz; relative timing jitter spectral density and integrated timing jitter of (i) the laser network; (ii) the local synchronization between the slave lasers and (iii) the noise floor of SF-BOC2. Please note that detector noise floor is only 12 as RMS integrated for 1 Hz–1 MHz. (c) Timing jitter and phase noise for the complete measurement range from 7 μHz up to 1 MHz. Right axes of (b) and (c) indicate the equivalent single-sideband (SSB) phase noise rescaled to 10-GHz carrier frequency.
Figure 4Noise sources of the synchronous laser network. (a) Jitter spectral densities of each noise source and their integrated timing jitter in logarithmic scale. The annotation on the right shows the color code of the graphs. (b) (i) measured out-of-loop timing jitter, (ii) sum of all calculated noise sources given in (a).