Stabilization of lasers through locking to optical cavities, atomic transitions, and molecular transitions has enabled the field of precision optical measurement since shortly after the invention of the laser. Recent advances in the field have produced an optical clock that is orders of magnitude more stable than those of just a few years prior. Phase locking of one laser to another, or to a frequency offset from another, formed the basis for linking stable lasers across the optical spectrum, such frequency chains exhibiting progressively finer precision through the years. Phase locking between the modes within a femtosecond pulsed laser has yielded the optical frequency comb, one of the most beautiful and useful instruments of our time. This talk gives an overview of these topics, from early work through to the latest 1E-16 thermal noise-limited precision recently attained for a stable laser, and the ongoing quest for ever finer precision and accuracy. The issues of understanding and measuring line widths and shapes are also studied in some depth, highlighting implications for servo design for sub-Hz line widths.
Revised: July 16, 2014 |
Published: July 1, 2013
Citation
Taubman M.S. 2013.Optical Frequency Stabilization and Optical Phase Locked Loops: Golden Threads of Precision Measurement. In American Control Conference (ACC 2013), June 17-19, 2013, Washington DC, 1488-1501. Piscataway, New Jersey:Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.PNNL-SA-93828.