Abstract In microcombs, solitons can drive non-soliton-forming modes to induce optical gain. Under specific conditions, a regenerative secondary temporal pulse coinciding in time and space with the exciting soliton pulse will form at a new spectral location. A mechanism involving Kerr-induced pulse interactions has been proposed theoretically, leading to multicolor solitons containing constituent phase-locked pulses. However, the occurrence of this phenomenon requires dispersion conditions that are not naturally satisfied in conventional optical microresonators. Here, we report the experimental observation of multicolor pulses from a single optical pump in a way that is closely related to the concept of multicolor solitons. The individual soliton pulses share the same repetition rate and could potentially be fully phase-locked. They are generated using interband coupling in a compound resonator.
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Qing-Xin Ji
Hanfei Hou
Jinhao Ge
Light Science & Applications
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Ji et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69b3ab6e02a1e69014ccc4ae — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41377-026-02200-0