Divergence of the variance of the optical phase in gain-switched semiconductor lasers described by stochastic rate equations
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Valle Gutiérrez, Ángel
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2023-05Derechos
Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article’s title, journal citation, and DOI.
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Physical Review Applied, 2023, 19(5), 054005
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American Physical Society
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Resumen/Abstract
We report a theoretical study of the phase diffusion in a gain-switched single-mode semiconductor laser.
We use stochastic rate equations for the electric field to analyze the phase statistics of the gain-switched
laser. Their use avoids the instabilities obtained with rate equations for the photon number and optical
phase when the photon number is small. However, we show that a new problem appears when the field
equations are integrated: the variance of the optical phase becomes divergent. This divergence cannot
be observed with the numerical integration of the commonly used equations for the photon number and
optical phase because of the previous instabilities. The divergence of the phase variance means that this
quantity does not reach a fixed value as the integration time step is decreased. We find that the phase
variance increases as the integration time step decreases, with no sign of saturation behavior even for tiny
steps. We explain the divergence by making the analogy of our problem with two-dimensional Brownian
motion. The fact that the divergence appears is not surprising because in 1940 Paul Lèvy demonstrated that
the variance of the polar angle in two-dimensional Brownian motion is a divergent quantity. Our results
show that stochastic rate equations for the photon number and phase are not appropriate for describing the
phase statistics when the photon number is small. Simulation of the stochastic rate equations for the electric
field are consistent with Lèvy's results but gives unphysical results since an infinite value is obtained for
a quantity that can be measured.
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