Low-noise lasers are critical in precision spectroscopy, displacement measurements, and optical atomic clock development. These fields require lasers with minimal frequency noise, combining cost-effectiveness with robust design. We introduce a simple, single-frequency laser that uses a ring fiber cavity for self-injection locking in a standard semiconductor distributed feedback (DFB) laser. Our design, unique in its use of polarization-maintaining (PM) singlemode optical fiber components, offers a maintenance-free operation and enhanced stability against environmental noise. Achieving continuous wave (CW) single-frequency operation, it maintains this state with low-bandwidth active optoelectronic feedback. The laser operates at ~8 mW, reducing the Lorentzian linewidth to ~75 Hz and achieving phase and intensity noise levels below –120 dBc/Hz and –140 dBc/Hz, respectively. Additionally, its thermal stabilization limits frequency drift to < 0.5 MHz/min with a maximum deviation of < 8 MHz. Implementing this design in integrated photonics could significantly cut costs and space requirements in high-capacity fiber networks, data centers, atomic clocks, and microwave photonics.
A method to carry out the compression of parabolic pulse in the nonuniform fibre cascade was proposed. The periodic
modulation of the dispersion along the fibre length can be used to control subpicosecond pulses in time and frequency
domains. Good agreement between simulations and experimental data takes place.
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