12.06.2025 • NewsLaser

Tiny laser measures objects at ultrafast rates

The chip-scale laser has applications ranging from guiding autonomous vehicles to detecting gravitational waves.

Researchers from the University of Rochester and University of California, Santa Barbara, engineered a laser device smaller than a penny that they say could power everything from the lidar systems used in self-driving vehicles to gravitational wave detection, one of the most delicate experiments in existence to observe and understand our universe. Laser-based measurement techniques – optical metrology – can be used to study the physical properties of objects and materials. But current optical metrology requires bulky and expensive equipment to achieve delicate laser-wave control, creating a bottleneck for deploying streamlined, cost-effective systems.

A new chip-scale laser can conduct extremely fast and accurate measurements by...
A new chip-scale laser can conduct extremely fast and accurate measurements by very precisely changing its color across a broad spectrum of light at very fast rates. (Source: J. Adam Fenster, U. Rochester)

The new chip-scale laser can conduct extremely fast and accurate measurements by very precisely changing its color across a broad spectrum of light at very fast rates – about 10 quintillion times per second. Unlike traditional silicon photonics, the laser is made with lithium niobate and leverages a physical phenomenon – the Pockels effect, which changes the refractive index of a material when an electric field is present. “There are several applications we are aiming for that can already benefit from our designs,” says PhD student Shixin Xue. “The first is lidar, which is already used in autonomous vehicles, but a more advanced form known as frequency-modulated continuous-wave lidar requires a large tuning range and fast tuning of the laser’s frequency, and that’s what our laser can do.”

The researchers demonstrated how their laser could be used to drive a lidar system on a spinning disc and identify the letters U and R made out of Lego blocks. They say that the miniature demonstration could be scaled up to detect vehicles and obstacles at highway speeds and distances. The researchers also demonstrated how the chip-scale laser could be used for Pound-Drever-Hall (PDH) laser frequency locking, a common technique used to narrow down, stabilize, and reduce a laser’s noise.

“It’s a very important process that can be used for optical clocks that can measure time with extreme precision, but you need a lot of equipment to do that,” says Xue, noting that a typical setup might require instruments the size of a desktop computer such as an intrinsic laser, an isolator, an acoustic optic modulator, and a phase modulator. “Our laser can integrate all of these things into a very small chip that can be tuned electrically.” (Source: U. Rochester)

Reference: S. Xue et al.: Pockels laser directly driving ultrafast optical metrology, Light Sci. Appl. 14, 209 (2025); DOI: 10.1038/s41377-025-01872-4

Link: Nanophotonics, Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Rochester, Rochester, USA

PhotonicsViews

PhotonicsViews September 2025 available now!

PhotonicsViews September 2025 available now!

The new issue of the PhotonicsViews is available. Read the September 2025 issue for free as PDF or E-Paper.

SPS Atlanta

A New Era of Smart Manufacturing Begins

A New Era of Smart Manufacturing Begins

The inaugural SPS – Smart Production Solutions Atlanta starts soon, marking a significant milestone in the evolution of the SPS brand

most read

Photo
07.07.2025 • News

Quantum technologies on the rise

World of Quantum 2025 in Munich recorded impressive growth with 160 exhibitors from 16 countries and over 22,000 visitors from 41 countries.