We experimentally investigated the build-up dynamics of single-cavity dual-wavelength-comb pulses emitted from a ring fiber cavity with Lyot filter configuration. Dual-wavelength lasers are firstly observed by adjusting the polarization controller to control Lyot filter effect. When the pump powers of the bidirectional pumps are set as 57 mW and 49 mW respectively, dual-wavelength pulses with the center wavelengths of 1546.2 nm and 1563.6 nm and spectral bandwidths of 2 nm and 1.6 nm are obtained. Subsequently, time-stretched dispersive Fourier transform spectroscopy is adopted to monitor the build-up process of dual-wavelength pulses. When switching on the pump diode, the three-stage build-up process from background noise to stable dual-wavelength pulses is experimentally observed. The build-up time is at the level of hundreds of milliseconds. These results provide a deep understanding of single-cavity dual-wavelength-comb pulse generation and contribute to the design and control of the single-cavity dual-comb pulses.
We proposed the triple-wavelength pulses across the 1530- and 1550-nm gain regions are emitted from a carbon nanotube mode-locked ring fiber laser by simultaneously exploiting intracavity loss-based gain profile tuning, Lyot filter effect, and nonlinear polarization evolution. A polarization beam splitter with 2×1-m intracavity polarization-maintaining fiber pigtails is additionally introduced in a typical ring fiber cavity. Polarization-dependent loss is firstly adjusted to equalize the 1530- and 1550-nm gain regions. Except for the triple-wavelength pulses based on Lyot filter and loss-based gain profile tuning, another type of triple-wavelength pulses, i.e. single-wavelength pulse centered at 1530-nm gain region and spectral-overlapping dual-wavelength pulses centered at 1550-nm gain region, are observed by additionally introducing nonlinear polarization evolution. These intriguing results show the feasibility of multi-wavelength pulse generation based on multiple soliton formation mechanisms and the high potential to construct a single-cavity multiple-comb source with versatile pulse characteristics.
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