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On-chip optical parametric oscillation into the visible: generating red, orange, yellow, and green from a near-infrared pump

Optical parametric oscillation (OPO) in a microresonator is promising as an efficient and scalable approach to on-chip coherent visible light generation. However, so far only red light at < 420 THz (near the edge of the visible band) has been reported. In this work, we demonstrate on-chip OPO covering > 130 THz of the visible spectrum, including red, orange, yellow, and green wavelengths. In particular, using a pump laser that is scanned 5 THz in the near-infrared from 386 THz to 391 THz, the signal is tuned from the near-infrared at 395 THz to the visible at 528 THz, while the idler is tuned from the near-infrared at 378 THz to the infrared at 254 THz. The widest signal-idler separation we demonstrate of 274 THz corresponds to more than an octave span and is the widest demonstrated for a nanophotonic OPO to date. Our work is a clear demonstration of how nonlinear nanophotonics can transform light from readily accessible compact near-infrared lasers to targeted visible wavelengths of interest, which is crucial for field-level deployment of spectroscopy and metrology systems.

preprint2020arXivOpen access
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