NIST - National Institute of Standards and Technology

02/11/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 02/12/2025 03:09

Cryogenic photonic resonator with 10−17/s drift

Published
February 11, 2025

Author(s)

Wei Zhang, William Milner, Jun Ye, Scott Papp

Abstract

Thermal noise is the predominant instability in the provision of ultrastable laser frequency by reference to a cavity. Reducing the thermal-noise limit of a cavity means either making it larger to spread thermal fluctuations, reducing the sensitivity of the cavity to temperature, or lowering the temperature. We report on a compact photonic resonator made of solid fused silica that we cool in a cryogenic environment. We explore a null in the resonator's frequency sensitivity due to the balance of thermal expansion and thermo-optic coefficients at a temperature of 9.5 K, enabling laser stabilization with a long-term frequency drift of 4 mHz/s on the 195 THz carrier. The robustness of fused silica to cryogenics, the capability for photonic design to mitigate thermal noise and drift, and operation at a modest 9.5 K temperature offer unique options for ultrastable laser systems.
Citation
Optics Letters
Pub Type
Journals

Keywords

frequency metrology, integrated photonics

Citation

Zhang, W. , Milner, W. , Ye, J. and Papp, S. (2025), Cryogenic photonic resonator with 10−17/s drift, Optics Letters (Accessed February 12, 2025)

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