A method to lower the detection limit for optical beat signals from a frequency-dithered stabilized laser


Autoria(s): Cooper, Steven; Howick, Eleanor; McLeod, Duncan; Wright, Doug; King, Tom; Stedman, Geoff
Data(s)

01/01/2001

Resumo

A narrow absorption feature in an atomic or molecular gas (such as iodine or methane) is used as the frequency reference in many stabilized lasers. As part of the stabilization scheme an optical frequency dither is applied to the laser. In optical heterodyne experiments, this dither is transferred to the RF beat signal, reducing the spectral power density and hence the signal to noise ratio over that in the absence of dither. We removed the dither by mixing the raw beat signal with a dithered local oscillator signal. When the dither waveform is matched to that of the reference laser the output signal from the mixer is rendered dither free. Application of this method to a Winters iodine-stabilized helium-neon laser reduced the bandwidth of the beat signal from 6 MHz to 390 kHz, thereby lowering the detection threshold from 5 pW of laser power to 3 pW. In addition, a simple signal detection model is developed which predicts similar threshold reductions.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:13290

Palavras-Chave #quantam optics #atom optics #optical frequency #iodine-stabilized helium-neon laser #optical heterodyne detection #frequency dither #optical beat detection #240402 Quantum Optics and Lasers
Tipo

Journal Article