Abstract

We study on the timing jitter characteristics of a passively mode-locked dual-wavelength dual-comb Er-fiber laser that generates two femtosecond optical frequency combs with an offset repetition rate in a shared cavity. The relative timing jitter is characterized directly in the time domain with tens of attoseconds precision by utilizing the intrinsic asynchronous optical sampling process between the two laser beams. This sensitive measurement reveals an amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) noise dominated random walk of the relative pulse timing, which has not been observed before in a dual-comb laser. The quantum-limited relative timing jitter behavior shows that the common-mode noise suppression based on a shared cavity does not apply to quantum noise. We further conduct a time-of-flight ranging experiment and a Fourier-transform spectroscopy simulation based on this dual-comb laser, showing that the quantum-limited relative timing jitter sets an ultimate limit on the reachable performance in time- and frequency-domain dual-comb applications particularly when the high acquisition rate is desired.

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