posted on 2025-08-26, 06:27authored byEduardo Granados, Zhenxu Bai
Tunable single-frequency lasers are essential for high-resolution spectroscopy and quantum technologies, yet achieving narrow-linewidth performance in compact, scalable systems across the UV-visible spectrum remains a key challenge. Recent work has revealed that Raman scattering in diamond can act as a natural spectral squeezer, where phonon dynamics help suppress frequency noise and concentrates optical power into a single, narrow spectral mode. Experiments at CERN and elsewhere have demonstrated linewidth compression by orders of magnitude, frequency-noise suppression exceeding 10³-10⁴, and pathways toward Schawlow–Townes-limited performance in CW regimes. These results establish Raman phonon damping as a universal mechanism for generating ultra-coherent, widely tunable lasers, opening new opportunities in quantum metrology, optical clocks, and high-resolution spectroscopy.