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Dive into the research topics where Laurent Labonté is active.

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Featured researches published by Laurent Labonté.


Optics Express | 2004

White-light supercontinuum generation in normally dispersive optical fiber using original multi-wavelength pumping system

Pierre-Alain Champert; Vincent Couderc; Philippe Leproux; Sébastien Février; Vincent Tombelaine; Laurent Labonté; Philippe Roy; Claude Froehly; Philippe Nerin

We report on the experimental demonstration of a white-light supercontinuum generation in normally dispersive singlemode air-silica microstructured fiber. We demonstrate that the simultaneous excitation of the microstuctured fiber in its normal and anomalous dispersion regimes using the fundamental and second harmonic signals of a passively Q-switched microchip laser leads to a homogeneous supercontinuum in the visible range. This pumping scheme allows the suppression of the cascaded Raman effect predominance in favor of an efficient spectrum broadening induced by parametric phenomena. A flat supercontinuum extended from 400 to 700 nm is achieved.


Advances in Optics and Photonics | 2011

Modes of random lasers

Jonathan Andreasen; Ara A. Asatryan; Lc Botten; Michael A. Byrne; Hui Cao; Li Ge; Laurent Labonté; Patrick Sebbah; A. D. Stone; Hakan E. Türeci; Christian Vanneste

In conventional lasers, the optical cavity that confines the photons also determines essential characteristics of the lasing modes such as wavelength, emission pattern, directivity, and polarization. In random lasers, which do not have mirrors or a well-defined cavity, light is confined within the gain medium by means of multiple scattering. The sharp peaks in the emission spectra of semiconductor powders, first observed in 1999, has therefore lead to an intense debate about the nature of the lasing modes in these so-called lasers with resonant feedback. We review numerical and theoretical studies aimed at clarifying the nature of the lasing modes in disordered scattering systems with gain. The past decade has witnessed the emergence of the idea that even the low-Q resonances of such open systems could play a role similar to the cavity modes of a conventional laser and produce sharp lasing peaks. We focus here on the near-threshold single-mode lasing regime where nonlinear effects associated with gain saturation and mode competition can be neglected. We discuss in particular the link between random laser modes near threshold and the resonances or quasi-bound (QB) states of the passive system without gain. For random lasers in the localized (strong scattering) regime, QB states and threshold lasing modes were found to be nearly identical within the scattering medium. These studies were later extended to the case of more lossy systems such as random systems in the diffusive regime, where it was observed that increasing the openness of such systems eventually resulted in measurable and increasing differences between quasi-bound states and lasing modes. Very recently, a theory able to treat lasers with arbitrarily complex and open cavities such as random lasers established that the threshold lasing modes are in fact distinct from QB states of the passive system and are better described in terms of a new class of states, the so-called constant-flux states. The correspondence between QB states and lasing modes is found to improve in the strong scattering limit, confirming the validity of initial work in the strong scattering limit.


Optics Express | 2006

Tilted Fiber Bragg Grating photowritten in microstructured optical fiber for improved refractive index measurement

Minh Châu Phan Huy; Guillaume Laffont; Véronique Dewynter; Pierre Ferdinand; Laurent Labonté; Dominique Pagnoux; Philippe Roy; Wilfried Blanc; Bernard Dussardier

We report what we believe to be the first Tilted short-period Fiber Bragg Grating photowritten in a microstructured optical fiber for refractive index measurement. We investigate the spectral sensitivity of Tilted Fiber Bragg Grating to refractive index liquid inserted into the holes of a multimode microstructured fiber. We measure the wavelength shift of the first four modes experimentally observed when calibrated oils are inserted into the fiber holes, and thus we determine the refractive index resolution for each of these modes. Moreover, a cross comparison between experimental and simulation results of a modal analysis is performed. Two simulation tools are used, respectively based on the localized functions method and on a finite element method. All results are in very good agreement.


Journal of Optics | 2016

Quantum photonics at telecom wavelengths based on lithium niobate waveguides

Olivier Alibart; Virginia D’Auria; Marc De Micheli; Florent Doutre; Florian Kaiser; Laurent Labonté; Tommaso Lunghi; Eric Picholle; Sébastien Tanzilli

Integrated optical components on lithium niobate play a major role in standard high-speed communication systems. Over the last two decades, after the birth and positioning of quantum information science, lithium niobate waveguide architectures have emerged as one of the key platforms for enabling photonics quantum technologies. Due to mature technological processes for waveguide structure integration, as well as inherent and efficient properties for nonlinear optical effects, lithium niobate devices are nowadays at the heart of many photon-pair or triplet sources, single-photon detectors, coherent wavelength-conversion interfaces, and quantum memories. Consequently, they find applications in advanced and complex quantum communication systems, where compactness, stability, efficiency, and interconnectability with other guided-wave technologies are required. In this review paper, we first introduce the material aspects of lithium niobate, and subsequently discuss all of the above mentioned quantum components, ranging from standard photon-pair sources to more complex and advanced circuits.


Optics Express | 2016

High-quality photonic entanglement for wavelength-multiplexed quantum communication based on a silicon chip

Florent Mazeas; Michele Traetta; M. Bentivegna; F. Kaiser; Djeylan Aktas; Weiwei Zhang; Carlos Alonso Ramos; L. A. Ngah; Tommaso Lunghi; É. Picholle; Nadia Belabas-Plougonven; X. Le Roux; Eric Cassan; Delphine Marris-Morini; Laurent Vivien; Grégory Sauder; Laurent Labonté; Sébastien Tanzilli

We report an efficient energy-time entangled photon-pair source based on four-wave mixing in a CMOS-compatible silicon photonics ring resonator. Thanks to suitable optimization, the source shows a large spectral brightness of 400 pairs of entangled photons /s/MHz for 500 μW pump power, compatible with standard telecom dense wavelength division multiplexers. We demonstrate high-purity energy-time entanglement, i.e., free of photonic noise, with near perfect raw visibilities (> 98%) between various channel pairs in the telecom C-band. Such a compact source stands as a path towards more complex quantum photonic circuits dedicated to quantum communication systems.We report an efficient energy-time entangled photon-pair source based on four-wave mixing in a CMOS-compatible silicon photonics ring resonator. Thanks to suitable optimization, the source shows a large spectral brightness of 400 pairs of entangled photons /s/MHz for 500 μW pump power, compatible with standard telecom dense wavelength division multiplexers. We demonstrate high-purity energy-time entanglement, i.e., free of photonic noise, with near perfect raw visibilities (> 98%) between various channel pairs in the telecom C-band. Such a compact source stands as a path towards more complex quantum photonic circuits dedicated to quantum communication systems.


Optics Communications | 2014

Polarization entangled photon-pair source based on quantum nonlinear photonics and interferometry

F. Kaiser; Lutfi Arif Ngah; A. Issautier; T. Delord; D. Aktas; Virginia D’Auria; M. P. De Micheli; Anders Kastberg; Laurent Labonté; Olivier Alibart; Anthony Martin; Sébastien Tanzilli

We present a versatile, high-brightness, guided-wave source of polarization entangled photons, emitted at a tele-com wavelength. Photon-pairs are generated using an integrated type-0 nonlinear waveguide, and subsequently prepared in a polarization entangled state via a stabilized fiber interferometer. We show that the single photon emission wavelength can be tuned over more than 50 nm, whereas the single photon spectral bandwidth can be chosen at will over more than five orders of magnitude (from 25 MHz to 4 THz). Moreover, by performing entanglement analysis, we demonstrate a high degree of control of the quantum state via the violation of the Bell inequalities by more than 40 standard deviations. This makes this scheme suitable for a wide range of quantum optics experiments, ranging from fundamental research to quantum information applications. We report on details of the setup, as well as on the characterization of all included components, previously outlined in F. Kaiser et al. (2013 Laser Phys. Lett. 10, 045202).


Optics Letters | 2012

Localized mode hybridization by fine tuning of two-dimensional random media

Laurent Labonté; Christian Vanneste; Patrick Sebbah

We study numerically the interaction of spatially localized modes in strongly scattering two-dimensional (2D) media. We move eigenvalues in the complex plane by changing gradually the index of a single scatterer. When spatial and spectral overlap is sufficient, localized states couple, and avoided level crossing is observed. We show that local manipulation of the disordered structure can couple several localized states to form an extended chain of hybridized modes crossing the entire sample, thus changing the nature of certain modes from localized to extended in a nominally localized disordered system. We suggest such a chain in 2D random systems is the analog of one-dimensional necklace states, the occasional open channels predicted by Pendry [Physics 1, 20 (2008).] through which the light can sneak through an opaque medium.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Two-photon interference between disparate sources for quantum networking

Alex McMillan; Laurent Labonté; Alex S. Clark; Bryn Bell; Olivier Alibart; A. Martin; W.J. Wadsworth; Sébastien Tanzilli; John Rarity

Quantum networks involve entanglement sharing between multiple users. Ideally, any two users would be able to connect regardless of the type of photon source they employ, provided they fulfill the requirements for two-photon interference. From a theoretical perspective, photons coming from different origins can interfere with a perfect visibility, provided they are made indistinguishable in all degrees of freedom. Previous experimental demonstrations of such a scenario have been limited to photon wavelengths below 900 nm, unsuitable for long distance communication, and suffered from low interference visibility. We report two-photon interference using two disparate heralded single photon sources, which involve different nonlinear effects, operating in the telecom wavelength range. The measured visibility of the two-photon interference is 80 ± 4%, which paves the way to hybrid universal quantum networks.


Applied Optics | 2005

Test of photonic crystal fiber in broadband interferometry

Sébastien Vergnole; Laurent Delage; François Reynaud; Laurent Labonté; Philippe Roy; Gilles Melin; Laurent Gasca

Photonic crystal fibers (PCFs) are microstructured waveguides that are used in metrology, nonlinear optics, and coherent tomography. PCF studies are focused mainly on the improvement of dispersion properties and wide spectral single-mode operating domains. Consequently, in the astronomical context this kind of fiber is a good candidate for use in the design of a fiber-linked version of a stellar interferometer for aperture synthesis. We discuss the potential of these fibers to take advantage of wide spectral single-mode operation. We propose an experimental setup that acts as a two-beam interferometer that uses PCFs to measure fringe contrast at four wavelengths (670, 980, 1328, and 1543 nm), which correspond to the R, I, J, and H astronomical bands, respectively, with the same couple of PCFs. For this purpose we use, for the first time to our knowledge, a piezoelectric PCF optical path modulator.


Optics Express | 2012

Bragg-scattering conversion at telecom wavelengths towards the photon counting regime.

Katarzyna Krupa; Alessandro Tonello; Victor V. Kozlov; Vincent Couderc; Philippe Di Bin; Stefan Wabnitz; A. Barthelemy; Laurent Labonté; Sébastien Tanzilli

We experimentally study Bragg-scattering four-wave mixing in a highly nonlinear fiber at telecom wavelengths using photon counters. We explore the polarization dependence of this process with a continuous wave signal in the macroscopic and attenuated regime, with a wavelength shift of 23 nm. Our measurements of mean photon numbers per second under various pump polarization configurations agree well with the theoretical and numerical predictions based on classical models. We discuss the impact of noise under these different polarization configurations.

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Sébastien Tanzilli

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Olivier Alibart

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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Florian Kaiser

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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Virginia D'Auria

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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Lutfi Arif Ngah

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Anthony Martin

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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Florent Mazeas

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Djeylan Aktas

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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