High-stability offset-frequency locking of two lasers using a balanced filter discriminator
Abstract
We demonstrate a high-stability laser offset-frequency locking technique based on a balanced filter discriminator. The beat note between two 852 nm external-cavity diode lasers is down-converted in two parallel arms using local-oscillator frequencies placed symmetrically around the desired offset frequency. After low-pass filtering and RMS detection, differential subtraction of the two detector outputs produces a dispersive frequency-error signal with a zero crossing primarily defined by the reference local-oscillator frequencies. This balanced configuration reduces sensitivity to common beat-power fluctuations and can improve the effective error-signal signal-to-noise ratio. The system was implemented for an 8.653 GHz offset corresponding to the cesium repumping frequency difference used in our laser-cooling setup. Measurements with different low-pass filters reveal a trade-off between discrimination sensitivity and feedback bandwidth. With an SLP-1.9+ filter, the locked beat frequency reached a fractional instability of 4×10-15 at 10 s when referred to the 852 nm optical carrier. The residual dependence on photodetector optical power was also characterized, showing that amplitude-to-frequency conversion remains small in the optimized differential configuration. This approach provides a practical frequency-only offset-locking method for atomic-physics experiments requiring stable and tunable microwave-scale laser frequency offsets.
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