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Dive into the research topics where Kana Iwakuni is active.

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Featured researches published by Kana Iwakuni.


Optics Express | 2014

Operation of an optically coherent frequency comb outside the metrology lab

Laura C. Sinclair; Ian R. Coddington; William C. Swann; Greg Rieker; Archita Hati; Kana Iwakuni; Nathan R. Newbury

We demonstrate a self-referenced fiber frequency comb that can operate outside the well-controlled optical laboratory. The frequency comb has residual optical linewidths of < 1 Hz, sub-radian residual optical phase noise, and residual pulse-to-pulse timing jitter of 2.4 - 5 fs, when locked to an optical reference. This fully phase-locked frequency comb has been successfully operated in a moving vehicle with 0.5 g peak accelerations and on a shaker table with a sustained 0.5 g rms integrated acceleration, while retaining its optical coherence and 5-fs-level timing jitter. This frequency comb should enable metrological measurements outside the laboratory with the precision and accuracy that are the hallmarks of comb-based systems.


Optics Express | 2012

Narrow linewidth comb realized with a mode-locked fiber laser using an intra-cavity waveguide electro-optic modulator for high-speed control

Kana Iwakuni; Hajime Inaba; Yoshiaki Nakajima; Takumi Kobayashi; Kazumoto Hosaka; Atsushi Onae; Feng-Lei Hong

We have developed an optical frequency comb using a mode-locked fiber ring laser with an intra-cavity waveguide electro-optic modulator controlling the optical length in the laser cavity. The mode-locking is achieved with a simple ring configuration and a nonlinear polarization rotation mechanism. The beat note between the laser and a reference laser and the carrier envelope offset frequency of the comb were simultaneously phase locked with servo bandwidths of 1.3 MHz and 900 kHz, respectively. We observed an out-of-loop beat between two identical combs, and obtained a coherent δ-function peak with a signal to noise ratio of 70 dB/Hz.


Applied Physics Express | 2015

Ultra-broadband dual-comb spectroscopy across 1.0–1.9 µm

Sho Okubo; Kana Iwakuni; Hajime Inaba; Kazumoto Hosaka; Atsushi Onae; Hiroyuki Sasada; Feng-Lei Hong

We have carried out dual-comb spectroscopy and observed in a simultaneous acquisition a 140-THz-wide spectrum from 1.0 to 1.9 µm using two fiber-based frequency combs phase-locked to each other. This ultrabroad-wavelength bandwidth is realized by setting the difference between the repetition rates of the two combs to 7.6 Hz using the sub-Hz-linewidth fiber combs. The recorded spectrum contains five vibration-rotation bands of C2H2, CH4, and H2O at different wavelengths across the whole spectrum. The determined transition frequencies of C2H2 agree with those from the previous sub-Doppler resolution measurement of individual lines using CW lasers within 2 MHz.


Optics Express | 2011

Absolute frequency list of the ν 3 -band transitions of methane at a relative uncertainty level of 10 −11

Sho Okubo; Hirotaka Nakayama; Kana Iwakuni; Hajime Inaba; Hiroyuki Sasada

We determine the absolute frequencies of 56 rotation-vibration transitions of the ν(3) band of CH(4) from 88.2 to 90.5 THz with a typical uncertainty of 2 kHz corresponding to a relative uncertainty of 2.2 × 10(-11) over an average time of a few hundred seconds. Saturated absorption lines are observed using a difference-frequency-generation source and a cavity-enhanced absorption cell, and the transition frequencies are measured with a fiber-laser-based optical frequency comb referenced to a rubidium atomic clock linked to the international atomic time. The determined value of the P(7) F(2)((2)) line is consistent with the International Committee for Weights and Measures recommendation within the uncertainty.


Optics Express | 2013

Spectroscopy of 171Yb in an optical lattice based on laser linewidth transfer using a narrow linewidth frequency comb.

Hajime Inaba; Kazumoto Hosaka; Masami Yasuda; Yoshiaki Nakajima; Kana Iwakuni; Daisuke Akamatsu; Sho Okubo; Takuya Kohno; Atsushi Onae; Feng-Lei Hong

We propose a novel, high-performance, and practical laser source system for optical clocks. The laser linewidth of a fiber-based frequency comb is reduced by phase locking a comb mode to an ultrastable master laser at 1064 nm with a broad servo bandwidth. A slave laser at 578 nm is successively phase locked to a comb mode at 578 nm with a broad servo bandwidth without any pre-stabilization. Laser frequency characteristics such as spectral linewidth and frequency stability are transferred to the 578-nm slave laser from the 1064-nm master laser. Using the slave laser, we have succeeded in observing the clock transition of (171)Yb atoms confined in an optical lattice with a 20-Hz spectral linewidth.


Optics Letters | 2016

Generation of a frequency comb spanning more than 3.6 octaves from ultraviolet to mid infrared

Kana Iwakuni; Sho Okubo; Osamu Tadanaga; Hajime Inaba; Atsushi Onae; Feng-Lei Hong; Hiroyuki Sasada

We have observed an ultra-broadband frequency comb with a wavelength range of at least 0.35 to 4.4 μm in a ridge-waveguide-type periodically poled lithium niobate device. The PPLN waveguide is pumped by a 1.0-2.4 μm wide frequency comb with an average power of 120 mW generated using an erbium-based mode-locked fiber laser and a following highly nonlinear fiber. The coherence of the extended comb is confirmed in both the visible (around 633 nm) and the mid-infrared regions.


Optics Letters | 2014

Design of cavity-enhanced absorption cell for reducing transit-time broadening

Masashi Abe; Kana Iwakuni; Sho Okubo; Hiroyuki Sasada

To reduce the linewidth of Lamb dips, we introduce a cavity-enhanced absorption cell (CEAC) coupled with a Gaussian beam with a 1.9-mm 1/e(2) radius at the beam waist for the reduction of transit-time broadening. We state that transit-time broadening depends only on the beam radius at the beam waist. This fact is useful for the design of the CEAC, and a pair of concave and convex mirrors is thereby employed. We have carried out sub-Doppler resolution spectroscopy of the ν(3) band of CH(4) and the ν(1) band of CH(3)D using a difference-frequency-generation source and the CEAC, and the recorded Lamb dips narrow to 80 kHz (HWHM).


Optics Express | 2013

A novel frequency control scheme for comb-referenced sensitive difference-frequency-generation spectroscopy

Kana Iwakuni; Sho Okubo; Hiroyuki Sasada

We present a novel scheme of frequency scan and wavelength modulation of a difference-frequency-generation source for comb-referenced sensitive spectroscopy. While the pump and signal frequencies are phase-locked to an optical frequency comb (OFC), the offset frequency between the signal wave and the nearest comb tooth is modulated to apply a wavelength-modulation technique, and the idler wave frequency is repeatedly swept for signal accumulation by changing the repetition frequency of the OFC. The spectrometer is applied to absolute frequency measurement of weak hyperfine-resolved rovibration transitions of the ν(1) band of CH(3)I, and the uncertainty in frequency determination is reduced by one order of magnitude in compared with that of the previous work published in Optics Express 20, 9178-9186 (2012).


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2010

All-fiber-based frequency comb with an intra-cavity waveguide electro-optic modulator

Yoshiaki Nakajima; Hajime Inaba; Kana Iwakuni; Kazumoto Hosaka; Atsushi Onae; Kaoru Minoshima; Feng-Lei Hong

We develop an all-fiber-based frequency comb with an intra-cavity waveguide electro-optic modulator. A comb mode is successfully phase-locked to an optical reference. The servo bandwidth of repetition rate is approximately 400 kHz.


Optics Letters | 2015

Sub-Doppler resolution mid-infrared spectroscopy using a difference-frequency-generation source spectrally narrowed by laser linewidth transfer.

Hideyuki Sera; Masashi Abe; Kana Iwakuni; Sho Okubo; Hajime Inaba; Feng-Lei Hong; Hiroyuki Sasada

The spectral linewidth of a 3.28 μm difference-frequency-generation source has been reduced to 3.5 kHz using a laser linewidth transfer technique [Opt. Express21, 7891 (2013)]. We use an optical frequency comb with a broad servo bandwidth to transfer a narrow linewidth of a pump laser, a 1.06 μm Nd:YAG laser, to a signal laser, a 1.57 μm external-cavity laser diode. This source enables us to record the Lamb dip of the ν3 band R(2) E transition of methane with a molecular spectral linewidth of 21 kHz while the frequency axis is absolutely calibrated.

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Hajime Inaba

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Sho Okubo

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Feng-Lei Hong

Yokohama National University

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Atsushi Onae

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Kazumoto Hosaka

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Yoshiaki Nakajima

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Daisuke Akamatsu

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Masami Yasuda

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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