Frequency Stability of 2.5×10-17 from a Si Cavity with AlGaAs Crystalline Mirrors

Authored by

Dahyeon Lee, Zoey Z. Hu, Ben Lewis, Alexander Aeppli, Kyungtae Kim, Zhibin Yao, Thomas Legero, Daniele Nicolodi, Fritz Riehle, Uwe Sterr, Jun Ye

Abstract

Developments in ultrastable lasers have fueled remarkable advances in optical frequency metrology and quantum science. A key ingredient in further improving laser frequency stability is the use of low-noise mirror materials such as AlGaAs crystalline coatings. However, excess noise observed with these coatings limits the performance of cryogenic silicon cavities with AlGaAs mirrors to similar levels achieved with conventional dielectric coatings. With a new pair of crystalline coated mirrors in a 6-cm-long cryogenic silicon cavity operated at 17 K, we demonstrate a clear advantage of crystalline coatings over dielectric coatings. The achieved fractional frequency stability of 2.5×10-17 at 10 s is four times better than expected for dielectric mirrors and corresponds to more than a tenfold reduction in the coating mechanical loss factor. We also combine two silicon cavities to demonstrate optical frequency averaging for enhanced stability. In addition, we present a long-term frequency drift record of four cryogenic silicon cavities measured over several years. These results open up realistic prospects for cavity-stabilized lasers with 10-18 fractional stability, as well as an all-optical timescale with continuously operating optical local oscillators.

Details

External Organisation(s)
JILA
University of Colorado Boulder
Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt PTB
Type
Article
Journal
Physical review letters
Volume
136
ISSN
0031-9007
Publication date
23.01.2026
Publication status
Published
Peer reviewed
Yes
ASJC Scopus subject areas
General Physics and Astronomy
Electronic version(s)
https://doi.org/10.1103/zgrm-cjbb (Access: Closed )

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