Abstract

Both the junction voltage fluctuations and the frequency fluctuations of a semiconductor laser are highly correlated with its intensity noise. We analyze three schemes where the correlation information is used to reduce the intensity noise. In conventional semiconductor lasers, starting with intensity noise at the standard quantum limit, ideally 3-dB amplitude squeezing is possible. The influence of nonideal factors such as parasitics for junction voltage feedforward and the linewidth floor for frequency noise feedforward are discussed. It is shown that under certain conditions the number-phase uncertainty can reach the ultimate limit set by Heisenberg's uncertainty principle. These conditions are clarified, and examples are given for both conventional semiconductor lasers and microcavity lasers.

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