Nature Communications (Feb 2024)

Continuous ultraviolet to blue-green astrocomb

  • Yuk Shan Cheng,
  • Kamalesh Dadi,
  • Toby Mitchell,
  • Samantha Thompson,
  • Nikolai Piskunov,
  • Lewis D. Wright,
  • Corin B. E. Gawith,
  • Richard A. McCracken,
  • Derryck T. Reid

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-45924-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Cosmological and exoplanetary science using transformative telescopes like the ELT will demand precise calibration of astrophysical spectrographs in the blue-green, where stellar absorption lines are most abundant. Astrocombs—lasers providing a broadband sequence of regularly-spaced optical frequencies on a multi-GHz grid—promise an atomically-traceable calibration scale, but their realization in the blue-green is challenging for current infrared-laser-based technology. Here, we introduce a concept achieving a broad, continuous spectrum by combining second-harmonic generation and sum-frequency-mixing in an MgO:PPLN waveguide to generate 390–520 nm light from a 1 GHz Ti:sapphire frequency comb. Using a Fabry-Pérot filter, we extract a 30 GHz sub-comb spanning 392–472 nm, visualizing its thousands of modes on a high-resolution spectrograph. Experimental data and simulations demonstrate how the approach can bridge the spectral gap present in second-harmonic-only conversion. Requiring only $$\approx$$ ≈ 100 pJ pulses, our concept establishes a new route to broadband UV-visible generation at GHz repetition rates.