Affiliation:
1. University of Colorado Boulder
2. National Institute of Standards and Technology
Abstract
The Fabry–Perot resonator is one of the most widely used optical
devices, enabling scientific and technological breakthroughs in
diverse fields including cavity quantum electrodynamics, optical
clocks, precision length metrology, and spectroscopy. Though resonator
designs vary widely, all high-end applications benefit from mirrors
with the lowest loss and highest finesse possible. Fabrication of the
highest-finesse mirrors relies on centuries-old mechanical polishing
techniques, which offer losses at the parts-per-million (ppm) level.
However, no existing fabrication techniques are able to produce
high-finesse resonators with the large range of mirror geometries
needed for scalable quantum devices and next-generation compact atomic
clocks. In this paper, we introduce a scalable approach to fabricate
mirrors with ultrahigh finesse (
≥
10
6
) and user-defined radius of curvature
spanning of four orders of magnitude (
10
−
4
−
10
0
m
). We employ photoresist reflow and
reactive ion etching to shape and transfer mirror templates onto a
substrate while maintaining sub-Angstrom roughness. This substrate is
coated with a dielectric stack and used to create arrays of compact
Fabry–Perot resonators with finesse values as high as 1.3 million and
measured excess loss
<
1
p
p
m
. Optical ringdown measurements of 43
devices across five substrates reveal that the fabricated cavity
mirrors—with both small and large radii of curvature—produce an
average coating-limited finesse of 1.05 million. This versatile
approach opens the door to scalable fabrication of high-finesse
miniaturized Fabry–Perot cavities needed for emerging quantum optics
and frequency metrology technologies.
Funder
National Institute of Standards and
Technology
Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency
U.S. Department of Energy
Subject
Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Cited by
33 articles.
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