Abstract

The paper presents a theoretical study of synchronization between two coupled lasers. A theory valid for arbitrary coupling between lasers is used. Its key feature is that the laser field is decomposed in terms of the composite-cavity modes reflecting the spatial field dependence over the entire coupled-laser system. The ensuing multimode equations are reduced to class-B, and further to class-A equations which resemble competing species equations. Bifurcation analysis, supported by insight provided by analytical solutions, is used to investigate influences of pump, carrier decay rate, polarization decay rate, and coupling mirror losses on synchronization between lasers. Population pulsation is found to be an essential mode competition mechanism responsible for bistability in the synchronized solutions. Finally, we discovered that the mechanism leading to laser synchronization changes from strong composite-cavity mode competition in class-A regime to frequency locking of composite-cavity modes in class-B regime.

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