Abstract

Optical microresonators are ideal tools for the reduction of the threshold of optical parametric oscillation based on four-wave mixing. Usually, the efficiency and bandwidth of the resonant process are interdependent due to stringent phase matching requirements leading to limitation of the bandwidth of the spectrum generated for a given pump power. We demonstrate a continuous-wave low-threshold resonant optical parametric oscillator with optical spectral span ranging from 0.36 to 1.6 μm. Harmonic generation is observed when a MgF2 microresonator characterized by quality factor approaching 1010 is pumped either at 780 nm, with a standard distributed-feedback semiconductor laser, or at 698 nm, with a reflective amplifier. Pump power does not exceed 25 mW. The nonlinear process is phase matched due to χ(3)-facilitated interaction of different mode families of the resonator. The optical harmonics generated can be used to seed high-power visible lasers, generate correlated photon pairs, and perform spectroscopy measurements.

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