Back to Search Start Over

Self-induced frequency scanning and distributed Bragg reflection in semiconductor lasers with phase-conjugate feedback

Authors :
Cronin-Golomb, Mark
Yariv, Amnon
Cronin-Golomb, Mark
Yariv, Amnon
Publication Year :
1986

Abstract

A GaAlAs semiconductor laser with feedback from a barium titanate photorefractive ring passive phase-conjugate mirror can be made to perform repeating or nonrepeating frequency scans over a 10-nm range toward either the blue or the red. The direction of scanning and whether the scans repeat may be controlled by adjusting the overlap of the interaction beams in the crystal. This overlap region may be adjusted so that the diode frequency spectrum, originally occupying about 10 longitudinal modes, scans and narrows as the conjugate signal builds up, coming to rest often in one, but sometimes two or three, longitudinal modes as a result of self-generated distributed-feedback effects. We also report similar effects caused by feedback from the total-internal-reflection passive phase-conjugate mirror. The alignment-control mechanism of the ring mirror is, however, not available in this case.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, Self-induced frequency scanning and distributed Bragg reflection in semiconductor lasers with phase-conjugate feedback, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1004810652
Document Type :
Electronic Resource