Laser stabilized to a room temperature cavity with AlGaAs coatings reaching 4.2 × 10-17 fractional frequency instability

Abstract

We present a laser system referenced to a room-temperature ultrastable cavity employing crystalline AlGaAs coatings. We demonstrate a fractional frequency instability of 4.2 × 10-17, which is one of the lowest for room temperature systems and surpasses the limit imposed by Brownian noise if dielectric coatings were employed. For the first time in a room temperature system we identified the spontaneous fluctuations of the coating birefringence as a leading contribution to frequency instability. At optimized conditions we achieve an ultrastable cavity with an eigenfrequency that is highly immune to power fluctuations. As acceleration noise is the main noise contribution, we demonstrated that a feed-forward method can reduce the influence of accelerations on the cavity-stabilized laser frequency by a factor of four.

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