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			<titleStmt><title level='a'>Dynamical Methods for Studying Stability and Noise in Frequency Comb Sources</title></titleStmt>
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				<date>2021 November</date>
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				<bibl> 
					<idno type="par_id">10326114</idno>
					<idno type="doi"></idno>
					<title level='j'>Progress in Electromagnetics Research Symposium 2021</title>
<idno></idno>
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					<author>L. Courtright C.R. Menyuk</author>
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			<abstract><ab><![CDATA[Frequency combs, invented in 2000, have revolutionized frequency measurement and there-by impacted a host of applications. These include applications to military systems, medi-cine, environmental sensing, astrophysics, and basic physics. The sources have improveddramatically in the past decade, evolving from laboratory-size lasers to ber lasers to mi-croresonators on a chip. However, the theoretical input to these developments has beensurprisingly small. The key problem in designing frequency combs is to determine wherein the experimentally-adjustable parameter space stable solutions exist, to determine howto access them, and to determine the impact that noise has on them. While analyticalapproaches to answer these questions exist, computational tools to implement these ap-proaches in realistic settings have been lacking. Our research has developed computationaltools to address these issues, focusing on ber laser and microresonator combs. In this talk,we will review our progress to date and discuss open problems.]]></ab></abstract>
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