4.7 Article

Passive Optical Phase Stabilization on a Ring Fiber Network

Journal

JOURNAL OF LIGHTWAVE TECHNOLOGY
Volume 38, Issue 21, Pages 5916-5924

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JLT.2020.3006091

Keywords

Adaptive optics; Optical mixing; Optical fiber networks; Optical fibers; Optical noise; Optical clock; optical frequency transfer; passive phase stabilization; ring fiber network; metrology

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [61627871, 61535006, 61905143]
  2. Science and Technology Project of State Grid Corporation of China [SGSHJX00KXJS1901531]

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Optical frequency transfer provides the means for high-fidelity frequency transfer across thousands of kilometers. A critical step in the further developing optical frequency transfer is its capability to transfer a high spectral purity feature from ultrastable lasers or optical clocks to any remote locations and, at the same time, its adaptability to incorporate the optical frequency transfer technique into any existing communication networks with different topologies. Here we for the first time report a technique that delivers optical-frequency signals to multiple independent remote hubs along a ring optical-fiber network with passive phase stabilization. The technique automatically corrects optical-fiber length fluctuations of arbitrary hubs along the loop by mixing and shifting optical signals. Without the help of an active phase tracker and a compensator, it could significantly mitigate some technical problems such as the limited compensation speed and phase recovery time, the phase jitter contamination caused by the servo bump in conventional phase noise cancellation. Moreover, by transmitting optical signals along both directions using the same optical source, it can improve the signal-to-noise ratio at each hub. This technique maintains the same delay-limited phase noise correction capability as in conventional techniques and, furthermore, improves the phase jitter by a factor of 3, opening a way to a broad distribution of an ultrastable frequency reference with high spectral purity and enabling a wide range of applications beyond metrology over a ring fiber network with the naturally impressive reliability and scalability.

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