The search functionality is under construction.

Author Search Result

[Author] Shin ARAHIRA(2hit)

1-2hit
  • Modified NOLM for Stable and Improved 2R Operation at Ultra-High Bit Rates

    Shin ARAHIRA  Hitoshi MURAI  Yoh OGAWA  

     
    PAPER-Fiber-Optic Transmission for Communications

      Vol:
    E89-B No:12
      Page(s):
    3296-3305

    A nonlinear optical fiber loop mirror (NOLM) adapted for all-optical 2R operation at ultrahigh bit-rates was experimentally and theoretically investigated. The proposed NOLM was created by adding inline/external fiber polarizers and also an inline optical phase-bias compensator (OPBC) to a standard NOLM. A theoretical investigation revealed that the operation of the standard NOLM became unstable due to residual polarization crosstalk of the polarization-maintaining optical components making up the NOLM, and that it could be dramatically improved with the inline/external polarizers. The NOLM with the polarizers ensured stable switching operation with high switching-dynamic-range (>30 dB) against the change of the wavelength of the input clock pulses, and the change of the environment temperature. We also experimentally verified that the OPBC played a dramatic role to ensure excellent dynamic switching performance of the NOLM, and to achieve signal-Q-recovery of the regenerated signals. All optical 2R experiments at 40 Gb/s and 160 Gb/s were performed with the modified NOLM. Signal regeneration with improved extinction ratio and signal Q value was successfully demonstrated. Q-recovery to the input of the control pulses degraded with ASE noise accumulation was also successfully achieved.

  • Stabilization and Timing Jitter Reduction of 160 GHz Colliding-Pulse Mode-Locked Laser Diode by Subharmonic-Frequency Optical Pulse Injection

    Shin ARAHIRA  Yukio KATOH  Daisuke KUNIMATSU  Yoh OGAWA  

     
    PAPER-High-Speed Optical Devices

      Vol:
    E83-C No:6
      Page(s):
    966-973

    A 160 GHz colliding-pulse mode-locked laser diode (CPM-LD) was stabilized by injection of a stable master laser pulse train repeated at a 16th-subharmonic-frequency (9.873 GHz) of the CPM-LD's mode-locking frequency. Synchroscan steak camera measurements revealed a clear pulse train with 16-times repetition frequency of the master laser pulse train for the stabilized CPM-LD output, indicating that CPM-LD output was synchronized to the master laser and that the timing jitter was also reduced. The timing jitter of the stabilized CPM-LD was quantitatively evaluated by an all-optical down converting technique using the nonlinearity of optical fiber. This technique is simple and has a wider bandwidth in comparison to a conventional technique, making it possible to accurately measure the phase noise of ultrafast optical pulse train when its repetition frequency exceeds 100 GHz. The electrical power spectra measurements indicated that the CPM-LD's mode-locking frequency was exactly locked by the injection of the master laser pulse train and that the timing jitter decreased as the injection power increased. The timing jitter was reduced from 2.2 ps in free running operation to 0.26 ps at an injection power of 57 mW, comparable to that of the master laser (0.21 ps).