Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jeffrey W. Nicholson is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jeffrey W. Nicholson.


Optics Letters | 2004

Phase-locked, erbium-fiber-laser-based frequency comb in the near infrared

Brian R. Washburn; Scott A. Diddams; Nathan R. Newbury; Jeffrey W. Nicholson; Man F. Yan; Carsten G. Jørgensen

A phase-locked frequency comb in the near infrared is demonstrated with a mode-locked, erbium-doped, fiber laser whose output is amplified and spectrally broadened in dispersion-flattened, highly nonlinear optical fiber to span from 1100 to >2200 nm. The supercontinuum output comprises a frequency comb with a spacing set by the laser repetition rate and an offset by the carrier-envelope offset frequency, which is detected with the standard f-to-2f heterodyne technique. The comb spacing and offset frequency are phase locked to a stable rf signal with a fiber stretcher in the laser cavity and by control of the pump laser power, respectively. This infrared comb permits frequency metrology experiments in the near infrared in a compact, fiber-laser-based system.


Optics Express | 2008

Spatially and spectrally resolved imaging of modal content in large-mode-area fibers

Jeffrey W. Nicholson; A. D. Yablon; S. Ghalmi

A new measurement technique, capable of quantifying the number and type of modes propagating in large-mode-area fibers is both proposed and demonstrated. The measurement is based on both spatially and spectrally resolving the image of the output of the fiber under test. The measurement provides high quality images of the modes that can be used to identify the mode order, while at the same time returning the power levels of the higher-order modes relative to the fundamental mode. Alternatively the data can be used to provide statistics on the level of beam pointing instability and mode shape changes due to random uncontrolled fluctuations of the phases between the coherent modes propagating in the fiber. An added advantage of the measurement is that is requires no prior detailed knowledge of the fiber properties in order to identify the modes and quantify their relative power levels. Because of the coherent nature of the measurement, it is far more sensitive to changes in beam properties due to the mode content in the beam than is the more traditional M(2) measurement for characterizing beam quality. We refer to the measurement as Spatially and Spectrally resolved imaging of mode content in fibers, or more simply as S(2) imaging.


Optics Letters | 2006

Light propagation with ultralarge modal areas in optical fibers

Jeffrey W. Nicholson; S. Ghalmi; M. F. Yan; P. W. Wisk; Eric M. Monberg

We demonstrate robust single-transverse-mode light propagation in higher-order modes of a fiber, with effective area A(eff) ranging from 2,100 to 3,200 microm(2). These modes are accessed using long-period fiber gratings that enable higher-order-mode excitation over a bandwidth of 94 mm with greater than 99% of the light in the desired mode. The fiber is designed such that the effective index separation between modes is always large, hence minimizing in-fiber mode mixing and enabling light propagation over lengths as large as 12 m, with bends down to 4.5 cm radii. The modal stability increases with mode order, suggesting that A(eff) of this platform is substantially scalable.


Optics Express | 2007

Optically driven deposition of single-walled carbon-nanotube saturable absorbers on optical fiber end-faces.

Jeffrey W. Nicholson; Robert S. Windeler; David J. DiGiovanni

Optical radiation propagating in a fiber is used to deposit commercially available, single-walled carbon nanotubes on cleaved optical fiber end faces and fiber connectors. Thermophoresis caused by heating due to optical absorption is considered to be a likely candidate responsible for the deposition process. Single-walled carbon nanotubes have a fast saturable absorption over a broad wavelength range, and the demonstrated technique is an extremely simple and inexpensive method for making fiber-integrated, saturable absorbers for passive modelocking of fiber lasers. Pulse widths of 247 fs are demonstrated from an erbium-doped fiber laser operating at 1560 nm, and 137 fs pulses are demonstrated from an amplified Yb-doped fiber laser at 1070 nm.


Optics Letters | 2003

All-fiber, octave-spanning supercontinuum

Jeffrey W. Nicholson; M. F. Yan; P. W. Wisk; J. Fleming; Eric M. Monberg; A. Yablon; C. Jørgensen; T. Veng

We present an all-fiber supercontinuum source based on a passively mode-locked erbium fiber laser and a small-effective-area, germanium-doped silica fiber. The parallels between this system and the continuum generated in microstructured fibers with 800-nm pulses are discussed, and the role of dispersion is investigated experimentally. We construct a hybrid fiber by fusion splicing lengths of different-dispersion fiber together, generating more than an octave of bandwidth.


Optics Letters | 2006

Fiber-laser frequency combs with subhertz relative linewidths

William C. Swann; John J. McFerran; Ian R. Coddington; Nathan R. Newbury; Ingmar Hartl; Martin E. Fermann; Paul S. Westbrook; Jeffrey W. Nicholson; Kenneth S. Feder; C. Langrock; Martin M. Fejer

We investigate the comb linewidths of self-referenced, fiber-laser-based frequency combs by measuring the heterodyne beat signal between two independent frequency combs that are phase locked to a common cw optical reference. We demonstrate that the optical comb lines can exhibit instrument-limited, subhertz relative linewidths across the comb spectra from 1200 to 1720 nm with a residual integrated optical phase jitter of approximately 1 rad in a 60 mHz to 500 kHz bandwidth. The projected relative pulse timing jitter is approximately 1 fs. This performance approaches that of Ti:sapphire frequency combs.


IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics | 2009

Measuring the Modal Content of Large-Mode-Area Fibers

Jeffrey W. Nicholson; Andrew D. Yablon; John M. Fini; Marc D. Mermelstein

Spatially and spectrally resolved imaging of mode content in fibers, or more simply, S2 imaging, is a new measurement technique for analyzing the mode content of large-mode-area (LMA) fibers. It works by spatially resolving the spectral interference that occurs when light in a few-mode fibers scatters into different modes that then propagate with different group delays. A scanning spatial filter in the form of a single-mode fiber probe coupled to an optical spectrum analyzer is utilized to provide both spatial and spectral resolution, and the data are analyzed via the Fourier transform of the optical spectrum. The wealth of data allows for imaging multiple modes simultaneously propagating in the fiber under test as well as quantifying their relative power levels. In addition, the ability to analyze mode images as a function of modal group delay allows distinguishing between discrete scattering at fiber surfaces and distributed scattering that occurs along the length of the LMA fiber. The all-fiber nature of the setup makes the measurement sufficiently stable to measure phase images of the higher order modes (HOMs). Because the method is interferometrically based, even very weak HOMs can be detected.


Optics Letters | 2006

Anomalous dispersion in a solid, silica-based fiber

S. Ghalmi; Jeffrey W. Nicholson; M. F. Yan; P. W. Wisk; Eric M. Monberg

We demonstrate an all-solid (nonholey), silica-based fiber with anomalous dispersion at wavelengths where silica material dispersion is negative. This is achieved by exploiting the enhanced dispersion engineering capabilities of higher-order modes in a fiber, yielding + 60 ps/nm km dispersion at 1080 nm. By coupling to the desired higher-order mode with low-loss in-fiber gratings, we realize a 5 m long fiber module with a 300 fs/nm dispersion that yields a 1 dB bandwidth of 51 nm with an insertion loss of approximately 0.1 dB at the center wavelength of 1080 nm. We demonstrate its functionality as a critical enabler for an all-fiber, Yb-based, mode-locked femtosecond ring laser.


Optics Express | 2004

Fiber-laser-based frequency comb with a tunable repetition rate.

Brian R. Washburn; Richard W. Fox; Nathan R. Newbury; Jeffrey W. Nicholson; Kenneth S. Feder; Paul S. Westbrook; Carsten G. Jørgensen

A phase-locked, self-referenced frequency comb generated by a mode-locked fiber soliton laser with a tunable repetition rate is presented. The spacing of the frequency comb is set by the lasers repetition rate, which can be scanned from 49.3 MHz to 50.1 MHz while one tooth of the comb is held phase-locked to a stable RF source. This variable repetitionrate frequency comb should be useful for wavelength and length metrology, synchronization of different fiber laser-based frequency combs, and the generation of precise swept wavelength sources.


Optics Letters | 2012

Direct-comb molecular spectroscopy with accurate, resolved comb teeth over 43 THz.

Alexander M. Zolot; Fabrizio R. Giorgetta; Esther Baumann; Jeffrey W. Nicholson; William C. Swann; Ian R. Coddington; Nathan R. Newbury

We demonstrate a dual-comb spectrometer using stabilized frequency combs spanning 177 to 220 THz (1360 to 1690 nm) in the near infrared. Comb-tooth-resolved measurements of amplitude and phase generate over 4×10(5) individually resolved spectral elements at 100 MHz point spacing and kilohertz-level resolution and accuracy. The signal-to-noise ratio is 100 to 3000 per comb tooth. Doppler-broadened phase and amplitude spectra of CO(2), CH(4), C(2)H(2), and H(2)O in a 30 m multipass cell agree with established spectral parameters, achieving high-resolution measurements with optical bandwidth generally associated with blackbody sources.

Collaboration


Dive into the Jeffrey W. Nicholson's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John M. Fini

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nathan R. Newbury

National Institute of Standards and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge