1 September 1994 Frequency control of a laser diode by a photothermal effect and its application to frequency stabilization
Seiichi Kakuma, Kazuhiko Mishima, Ryoji Ohba
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The frequency of an AlGaAs laser diode (LD) was controlled by using a photothermal effect. If intensity-modulated light from a heating LD is focused on the active domain of another LD, a heat spot changes the effective cavity length of the LD and thus modulates the lasting frequency. For frequency stabilization, frequency shift is detected by a Fabry-Pérot etalon, and it is compensated for by controlling the intensity of the heating LD via a proportional-integral-derivative controller. The highest stability obtained is 2.6x 10-11 (π = 10 s), which is an improvement of 2 to 3 orders of magnitude over the free-running state. In this method, the concurrent intensity modulation is much smaller than in the current modulation method.
Seiichi Kakuma, Kazuhiko Mishima, and Ryoji Ohba "Frequency control of a laser diode by a photothermal effect and its application to frequency stabilization," Optical Engineering 33(9), (1 September 1994). https://doi.org/10.1117/12.177521
Published: 1 September 1994
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Cited by 10 scholarly publications and 1 patent.
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KEYWORDS
Modulation

Frequency modulation

Laser stabilization

Semiconductor lasers

Fermium

Photothermal effect

Temperature metrology

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