Abstract
In second harmonic generation, the phase of the optical field is doubled, which has important implications. Here, the phase-doubling effect is utilized to solve a long-standing challenge in the power scaling of single-frequency laser. (−π/2, π/2) binary phase modulation is applied to a single-frequency seed laser to broaden the spectrum and suppress the stimulated Brillouin scattering in a high-power fiber amplifier. The second harmonic of the phase-modulated laser returns to single frequency because the (−π/2, π/2) modulation is doubled to (−π, π) for the second harmonic. A compression-to-single-frequency rate as high as 95% is demonstrated in experiments limited by the electronic bandwidth of the setup. Such phase manipulation in wave-mixing processes may open up a new field of development in nonlinear optics and laser technology.
© 2022 Optical Society of America
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