Low-frequency fluctuation induced by injection-current modulation in semiconductor lasers with optical feedback

1998 ◽  
Vol 23 (17) ◽  
pp. 1369 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoshiro Takiguchi ◽  
Yun Liu ◽  
Junji Ohtsubo
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (17) ◽  
pp. 7871
Author(s):  
Jordi Tiana-Alsina ◽  
Cristina Masoller

The dynamics of semiconductor lasers with optical feedback and current modulation has been extensively studied, and it is, by now, well known that the interplay of modulation and feedback can produce a rich variety of nonlinear phenomena. Near threshold, in the so-called low frequency fluctuations regime, the intensity emitted by the laser, without modulation, exhibits feedback-induced spikes, which occur at irregular times. When the laser current is sinusoidally modulated, under appropriate conditions, the spikes lock to the modulation and become periodic. In previous works, we studied experimentally the locked behavior and found sub-harmonic locking (regular spike timing such that a spike is emitted every two or three modulation cycles), but we did not find spikes with regular timing, emitted every modulation cycle. To understand why 1:1 regular locking was not observed, here, we perform simulations of the well-known Lang–Kobayashi model. We find a good qualitative agreement with the experiments: with small modulation amplitudes, we find wide parameter regions in which the spikes are sub-harmonically locked to the modulation, while 1:1 locking occurs at much higher modulation amplitudes.


2000 ◽  
Vol 145 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 130-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruslan L. Davidchack ◽  
Ying-Cheng Lai ◽  
Athanasios Gavrielides ◽  
Vassilios Kovanis

Author(s):  
Jordi Tiana-Alsina ◽  
Javier M. Buldú ◽  
M. C. Torrent ◽  
Jordi García-Ojalvo

We quantify the level of stochasticity in the dynamics of two mutually coupled semiconductor lasers. Specifically, we concentrate on a regime in which the lasers synchronize their dynamics with a non-zero lag time, and the leader and laggard roles alternate irregularly between the lasers. We analyse this switching dynamics in terms of the number of forbidden patterns of the alternate time series. The results reveal that the system operates in a stochastic regime, with the level of stochasticity decreasing as the lasers are pumped further away from their lasing threshold. This behaviour is similar to that exhibited by a single semiconductor laser subject to external optical feedback, as its dynamics shifts from the regime of low-frequency fluctuations to coherence collapse.


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