Technique for multiplying the repetition rates of periodic trains of pulses by means of a temporal self-imaging effect in chirped fiber gratings
- 1 December 1999
- journal article
- Published by Optica Publishing Group in Optics Letters
- Vol. 24 (23) , 1672-1674
- https://doi.org/10.1364/ol.24.001672
Abstract
We show that a temporal effect that is equivalent to the spatial self-imaging (Talbot) effect applies to the reflection of periodic signals from linearly chirped fiber gratings. The effect can be used for multiplying the repetition frequency of a given periodic pulse train without distorting the individual pulse characteristics. The practical limit on the frequency-multiplication factor depends only on the temporal width of the individual pulse. Thus we demonstrate that a suitable combination of well-known techniques for short-pulse generation, such as pulse mode locking, and the technique proposed here allows us to obtain short-pulse trains with ultrahigh repetition rates (in the terahertz regime). Results from simulations show good agreement with those predicted by theory.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Real-time Fourier transformer based on fiber gratingsOptics Letters, 1999
- Dispersion cancellation using linearly chirped Bragg grating filters in optical waveguidesOptics Letters, 1987
- Generation of subpicosecond solitonlike optical pulses at 0.3 THz repetition rate by induced modulational instabilityApplied Physics Letters, 1986
- Generation of optical pulses shorter than 0.1 psec by colliding pulse mode lockingApplied Physics Letters, 1981
- Information capacity of Bragg holograms in planar opticsJournal of the Optical Society of America, 1981
- Optical pulse compression with diffraction gratingsIEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics, 1969
- Theory of Fresnel Images I Plane Periodic Objects in Monochromatic Light*Journal of the Optical Society of America, 1965