Scientists at the University of Konstanz (Germany) and the National
Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have demonstrated an
ultrafast laser that offers a record combination of high speed, short
pulses and high average power. The new laser is expected to have a
range of applications from gas sensors to communications, but in
particular, say researchers, it could boost the sensitivity of
astronomical tools searching for other Earthlike planets as much as 100
fold.
The dime-sized laser, described last week at the Conference on Lasers
and Electro-Optics,* emits 10 billion pulses per second, each lasting
about 40 femtoseconds (quadrillionths of a second). The short, fast
pulses make it ideal for use as a “frequency comb”—an
ultraprecise technique for measuring frequencies of light. It is 10
times faster than a standard NIST frequency comb, produces much shorter
pulses than comparable lasers, and is 100 to 1000 times more powerful
than typical high-speed lasers, producing clearer signals in
experiments. It was built by Albrecht Bartels at the Center for Applied
Photonics of the University of Konstanz in Germany.
As a frequency comb the laser could sharpen the search for planets
orbiting distant stars. Astronomers look for slight variations in the
apparent colors of starlight over time that are caused by the star
wobbling from the gravitational pull of an orbiting planet. The effect
is very subtle, and astronomers are limited by the frequency standards
they use to calibrate their instruments. Frequency combs could be such
superior calibration tools that they would make it possible to detect
even tiny Earthlike planets that cause color shifts equivalent to a
star wobble of just a few centimeters per second. Current instruments
can detect—at best—a wobble of about 1 meter per second.
Frequency combs normally have “teeth”—calibration
points—too finely spaced for astronomical instruments to read.
The faster laser is one approach to solving this problem. In a related
paper,** the NIST group and astronomer Steve Osterman at the University
of Colorado at Boulder describe how they can filter out periodic blocks
of teeth to create a gap-toothed comb. Bouncing the light between
carefully positioned mirrors leaves only every 10th or 20th tooth,
which is just right for astronomy.
The dime-sized laser is very simple in construction and produces
powerful and extremely well-defined comb teeth, and the filtering
technique can cover a broader range of wavelengths. Four or five
filtering cavities in parallel would provide a high-precision comb of
about 25,000 evenly spaced teeth that spans the visible to
near-infrared wavelengths (400 to 1100 nanometers), NIST physicist
Scott Diddams says.
A number of major institutions, including the Max-Planck Institute for
Quantum Optics and the Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics are
interested in the use of frequency combs for planet discovery. Other
potential applications of the new laser include direct measurements of
the expansion of the universe, remote sensing of gases for medical or
atmospheric studies, and on-the-fly precision control of high-speed
optical communications to provide greater versatility in data and time
transmissions.
* A. Bartels, D. Heinecke and S.A. Diddams. Passively mode-locked 10
GHz femtosecond Ti:sapphire laser with >1 mW of power per frequency
comb mode. Post-deadline paper presented at Conference on Lasers and
Electro-Optics (CLEO), San Jose, Calif., May 4-9, 2008.
** D.A.
Braje, M. S. Kirchner, S. Osterman, T. Fortier and S. A. Diddams.
Astronomical spectrograph calibration with broad-spectrum frequency
combs. To appear in European Physics Journal D.