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With demonstrated applications ranging from metrology to telecommunications, soliton microresonator frequency combs have emerged over the past decade as a remarkable new technology. However, standard implementations only allow for the generation of combs whose repetition rate is tied close to the fundamental resonator free-spectral range (FSR), offering little or no dynamic control over the comb line spacing. Here we propose and experimentally demonstrate harmonic and rational harmonic driving as novel techniques that allow for the robust generation of soliton frequency combs with discretely adjustable frequency spacing. By driving an integrated Kerr microresonator with a periodic train of picosecond pulses whose repetition rate is set close to an integer harmonic of the 3.23 GHz cavity FSR, we deterministically generate soliton frequency combs with frequency spacings discretely adjustable between 3.23 GHz and 19.38 GHz. More remarkably, we also demonstrate that driving the resonator at rational fractions of the FSR allows for the generation of combs whose frequency spacing corresponds to an integer harmonic of the pump repetition rate. By measuring the combs radio-frequency spectrum, we confirm operation in the low-noise soliton regime with no supermode noise. The novel techniques demonstrated in our work provide new degrees of freedom for the design of synchronously pumped soliton frequency combs.
The model, that is usually called Lugiato-Lefever equation (LLE), was introduced in 1987 with the aim of providing a paradigm for dissipative structure and pattern formation in nonlinear optics. This model, describing a driven, detuned and damped non
Rapid and large scanning of a dissipative Kerr-microresonator soliton comb with the characterization of all comb modes along with the separation of the comb modes is imperative for the emerging applications of the frequency-scanned soliton combs. How
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Microresonator-based Kerr frequency comb (microcomb) generation can potentially revolutionize a variety of applications ranging from telecommunications to optical frequency synthesis. However, phase-locked microcombs have generally had low conversion
A study is made of frequency comb generation described by the driven and damped nonlinear Schrodinger equation on a finite interval. It is shown that frequency comb generation can be interpreted as a modulational instability of the continuous wave pu