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On Wed, 8 May 2024 23:35:19 -0000 (UTC), Phil Hobbs
<pcdhSpamMeSenseless@electrooptical.net> wrote:
>Joe Gwinn <joegwinn@comcast.net> wrote:>On Wed, 8 May 2024 14:45:42 -0000 (UTC), Phil Hobbs>
<pcdhSpamMeSenseless@electrooptical.net> wrote:
[snip]
The cleverest part of the Hall-Haensch comb generator is that you can lock
the blue end of the comb to the second harmonic of the red end, one tooth
off, and lock the difference to a good reference. Then all the teeth have
the same phase noise as the reference oscillator, rather than 20 log(600
THz / 100 MHz) ~ 138 dB worse, as it would be in a multiplier.
Hmm. It had to be true, but I never connected the dots there. What
is mechanism by which this is achieved? References?
Thanks,
Joe Gwinn
Dont have the reference handy, but the basic idea is to use a modelocked
system Ti:sapphire laser at 750 nm to generate ~100-fs pulses, then use
fiber/grating pulse compression to bring that down to a few femtoseconds,
followed by a holey fiber to broaden the spectrum to more than an octave.
>
Jan Hall is one of the best instruments guys ever.
I'll poke around his publications. He's bound to have left tracks.
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