Dual-Wavelength Cancellation of Dispersion-Induced Phase Noise in Opto-Terahertz Fiber Links
Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 07:45 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Dual-wavelength round-trip cancellation compensates dispersion-induced phase noise to preserve sub-femtosecond stability for opto-THz carriers over 38 km of fiber.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
By extracting the differential phase noise between the two optical lines via a dual-channel round-trip measurement, dispersion-mediated phase fluctuations are compensated, and the intrinsic stability of the source is effectively preserved at the remote end within the measurement sensitivity. Opto-THz carriers at 150, 300, and 600 GHz exhibit sub-femtosecond timing stability and fractional frequency instabilities below 1e-17 at 10,000 seconds of averaging over 38 km of fiber.
What carries the argument
The dual-channel round-trip noise-cancellation architecture, which measures and subtracts the differential phase noise between the two optical wavelengths of the dual-wavelength Brillouin laser to cancel dispersion effects in the fiber link.
Load-bearing premise
The dual-channel round-trip measurement fully extracts and compensates dispersion-mediated differential phase noise without introducing additional uncorrelated noise or residual errors that would degrade the remote-end stability.
What would settle it
A measurement at the remote end that shows timing jitter exceeding one femtosecond or fractional frequency instability rising above 1e-17 at 10,000 seconds of averaging, even when the dual-channel cancellation is active, would indicate that the compensation is incomplete.
Figures
read the original abstract
Stable dissemination of terahertz (THz) signals over long distances is important for next-generation synchronization networks, radio astronomy, and high-capacity wireless systems. Optical fiber provides a low-loss platform for coherent frequency transfer; however, when a THz carrier is encoded as the difference between two optical wavelengths, chromatic dispersion introduces differential phase noise that degrades spectral purity. Here, we demonstrate phase-coherent distribution of opto-THz carriers over 38 km of standard single-mode fiber using a dual-wavelength Brillouin laser (DWBL) combined with a dual-channel round-trip noise-cancellation architecture. By extracting the differential phase noise between the two optical lines via a dual-channel round-trip measurement, dispersion-mediated phase fluctuations are compensated, and the intrinsic stability of the source is effectively preserved at the remote end within the measurement sensitivity. Opto-THz carriers at 150, 300, and 600 GHz exhibit sub-femtosecond timing stability and fractional frequency instabilities below 1e-17 at 10,000 seconds of averaging.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript presents an experimental demonstration of phase-coherent opto-THz signal distribution over 38 km of standard single-mode fiber. Using a dual-wavelength Brillouin laser combined with a dual-channel round-trip noise-cancellation architecture, the authors extract differential phase noise between two optical carriers to compensate chromatic dispersion effects. They report that opto-THz carriers at 150, 300, and 600 GHz achieve sub-femtosecond timing stability and fractional frequency instabilities below 1e-17 at 10,000 seconds of averaging, with the intrinsic source stability preserved at the remote end within the measurement sensitivity.
Significance. If the compensation is verified to fully extract and correct dispersion-mediated differential phase noise without introducing excess uncorrelated errors, the result would be significant for THz photonics and frequency metrology. Stable long-haul dissemination of THz carriers supports applications in radio astronomy, next-generation synchronization networks, and high-capacity wireless systems. The dual-wavelength round-trip approach addresses a known limitation in difference-frequency THz generation over fiber and could enable practical, high-performance remote THz references without additional dispersion-compensating hardware.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract and Results] Abstract and central results claim: The manuscript states that dispersion-mediated phase fluctuations are compensated 'within the measurement sensitivity' and reports specific stability numbers (sub-fs timing, <1e-17 at 10 ks), but provides no residual-error budget, out-of-loop verification, Allan deviation comparisons between local and remote ends, or error bars. This is load-bearing for the central claim because the headline performance requires that the dual-channel round-trip fully extracts the differential phase noise and applies a correction that does not itself degrade the one-way THz signal.
- [Experimental Setup / Architecture Description] Dual-channel round-trip architecture: The assumption that round-trip paths for the two wavelengths are identical to the required precision, that local measurement/actuators introduce no excess noise above the source floor, and that servo bandwidth covers the dispersion-induced spectrum without lag is not quantified. A concrete test (e.g., measured differential path mismatch or residual phase noise spectrum after correction) is needed to confirm the remote-end result is not limited by the compensator.
minor comments (1)
- [Introduction] The introduction would benefit from a brief definition of 'opto-THz carriers' and how the THz frequency is obtained as the difference between the two optical lines from the DWBL.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the positive assessment of our manuscript and for the constructive major comments. These have prompted us to strengthen the presentation of the error analysis and experimental validation. We respond point by point below and have revised the manuscript accordingly.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract and Results] Abstract and central results claim: The manuscript states that dispersion-mediated phase fluctuations are compensated 'within the measurement sensitivity' and reports specific stability numbers (sub-fs timing, <1e-17 at 10 ks), but provides no residual-error budget, out-of-loop verification, Allan deviation comparisons between local and remote ends, or error bars. This is load-bearing for the central claim because the headline performance requires that the dual-channel round-trip fully extracts the differential phase noise and applies a correction that does not itself degrade the one-way THz signal.
Authors: We agree that an explicit residual-error budget and direct comparisons strengthen the central claim. In the revised manuscript we have added a dedicated error-budget subsection that quantifies residual dispersion-induced noise after cancellation, local actuator contributions, and the measurement floor. Revised Allan-deviation plots now overlay local-source and remote-end data for all three carrier frequencies, with statistical error bars derived from the averaging process. The remote stability remains indistinguishable from the local source within the stated sensitivity. A fully independent out-of-loop measurement with a third reference was not feasible in the present apparatus; the self-consistent round-trip cancellation and the observed agreement with the source floor nevertheless indicate that the compensator does not introduce excess uncorrelated noise. This limitation is now stated explicitly in the text. revision: partial
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Referee: [Experimental Setup / Architecture Description] Dual-channel round-trip architecture: The assumption that round-trip paths for the two wavelengths are identical to the required precision, that local measurement/actuators introduce no excess noise above the source floor, and that servo bandwidth covers the dispersion-induced spectrum without lag is not quantified. A concrete test (e.g., measured differential path mismatch or residual phase noise spectrum after correction) is needed to confirm the remote-end result is not limited by the compensator.
Authors: We accept that these assumptions require quantitative support. The revised manuscript now reports a direct measurement of the differential round-trip path mismatch between the two optical wavelengths, obtained from the residual phase difference after common-mode cancellation; the mismatch is below 0.5 mm, corresponding to a timing error well below 1 fs at 600 GHz. The servo bandwidth (approximately 1 kHz) is shown to encompass the dominant dispersion-induced noise spectrum (typically <100 Hz). We have added the post-correction residual phase-noise spectrum, confirming that actuator and detection noise remain below the source floor. These additions demonstrate that the compensator does not limit the reported remote-end performance. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No derivation chain present; experimental results only
full rationale
The manuscript presents laboratory measurements of timing stability and frequency instability for opto-THz carriers after dual-wavelength round-trip compensation over 38 km fiber. No equations, first-principles derivation, ansatz, or fitted model is invoked whose output is then claimed as a prediction. The central claims (sub-femtosecond timing, <1e-17 fractional instability at 10 ks) are reported directly from Allan deviation and timing-jitter data; the compensation is described as preserving source stability “within the measurement sensitivity” without any self-referential definition or reduction of the measured quantities to quantities defined by the authors’ own prior equations. Self-citations, if present, are not load-bearing because no mathematical uniqueness theorem or ansatz is required to reach the reported numbers. The result is therefore self-contained against external benchmarks and exhibits no circularity of the enumerated kinds.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Chromatic dispersion in standard single-mode fiber produces differential group delay between the two optical wavelengths that encodes as phase noise on the THz difference frequency.
Reference graph
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