Sources in the THz range are required in order for NASA to implement heterodyne instruments in this frequency range. The source that has been demonstrated here will be used for an instrument on the SOFIA platform as well as for upcoming astrophysics missions. There are currently no electronic sources in the 2–3-THz frequency range. An electronically tunable compact source in this frequency range is needed for lab spectroscopy as well as for compact space-deployable heterodyne receivers. This solution for obtaining useful power levels in the 2–3-THz range is based on utilizing power-combined multiplier stages. Utilizing power combining, the input power can be distributed between different multiplier chips and then recombined after the frequency multiplication.

A continuous wave (CW) coherent source covering 2.48–2.75 THz, with greater than 10 percent instantaneous and tuning bandwidth, and having l–14 μW of output power at room temperature, has been demonstrated. This source is based on a 91.8–101.8-GHz synthesizer followed by a power amplifier and three cascaded frequency triplers. It demonstrates that purely electronic solid-state sources can generate a useful amount of power in a region of the electromagnetic spectrum where lasers (solid-state or gas) were previously the only available coherent sources. The bandwidth, agility, and operability of this THz source has enabled wideband, highresolution spectroscopic measurements of water, methanol, and carbon monoxide with a resolution and signal-to-noise ratio unmatched by other existing systems, providing new insight in the physics of these molecules. Further - more, the power and optical beam quality are high enough to observe the Lamb-dip effect in water. The source frequency has an absolute accuracy better than 1 part in 1012, and the spectrometer achieves sub-Doppler frequency resolution better than 1 part in 108. The harmonic purity is better than 25 dB.

This source can serve as a local oscillator for a variety of heterodyne systems, and can be used as a method for precision control of more powerful but much less frequency-agile quantum mechanical terahertz sources.

This work was done by Imran Mehdi, Goutam Chattopadhyay, Erich T. Schlecht, Robert H. Lin, Seth Sin, Alejandro Peralta, Choonsup Lee, John J. Gill , John C. Pearson, Paul F. Goldsmith, Peter H. Siegel, Brian J. Drouin, and Peter J. Bruneau of Caltech; Bertrand C. Thomas of ORAU/NPP; Alain Maestrini of Observatory de Paris; and John Ward of Raytheon for NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. For more information, contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. NPO-47903