Abstract

The ability to generate lower-noise microwaves has greatly advanced high-speed, high-precision scientific and engineering fields. Microcombs have high potential for generating such low-noise microwaves from chip-scale devices. To realize an ultralow-noise performance over a wider Fourier frequency range and longer time scale, which is required for many high-precision applications, free-running microcombs must be locked to more stable reference sources. However, ultrastable reference sources, particularly optical cavity-based methods, are generally bulky, alignment-sensitive and expensive, and therefore forfeit the benefits of using chip-scale microcombs. Here, we realize compact and low-phase-noise microwave and soliton pulse generation by combining a silica-microcomb (with few-mm diameter) with a fibre-photonic-based timing reference (with few-cm diameter). An ultrastable 22-GHz microwave is generated with −110 dBc/Hz (−88 dBc/Hz) phase noise at 1-kHz (100-Hz) Fourier frequency and 10−13-level frequency instability within 1-s. This work shows the potential of fully packaged, palm-sized or smaller systems for generating both ultrastable soliton pulse trains and microwaves, thereby facilitating a wide range of field applications involving ultrahigh-stability microcombs.

Highlights

  • The ability to generate lower-noise microwaves has greatly advanced high-speed, highprecision scientific and engineering fields

  • A pulse train with 22-GHz repetition rate is generated via four-wave mixing (FWM) and soliton mode-locking processes in a silica microresonator with a 3-mm-diameter driven by a CW pump laser

  • A 22-GHz microwave signal is extracted from an optical pulse train by an optical-to-electronic (OE) conversion process using a modified uni-travelling carrier (MUTC) photodiode followed by a radio-frequency (RF) bandpass filter and an RF amplifier

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Summary

Introduction

The ability to generate lower-noise microwaves has greatly advanced high-speed, highprecision scientific and engineering fields. We demonstrate the generation of low-phase-noise K-band microwaves from a palm-sized photonic platform by combining a silica microcomb and a fibre-photonic timing stabilisation method.

Results
Conclusion

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