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[[File:IR Optical Parametric Oscillator.JPG|thumb|300 px|right|Infrared optical parametric oscillator]]
An '''optical parametric oscillator''' (OPO) is a [[parametric oscillator]] that oscillates at optical frequencies. It converts an input [[laser]] wave (called "pump") with frequency <math>\omega_p</math> into two output waves of lower frequency (<math>\omega_s, \omega_i</math>) by means of second-[[Orders of approximation|order]] [[nonlinear optics|nonlinear optical interaction]]. The sum of the output waves' frequencies is equal to the input wave frequency: <math>\omega_s + \omega_i=\omega_p</math>. For historical reasons, the two output waves are called "signal" and "idler", where the output wave with higher frequency is
The first optical parametric oscillator was demonstrated by Joseph Giordmaine and Bob Miller in 1965,<ref>{{Cite journal|url = http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevLett.14.973|title = Tunable Coherent Parametric Oscillation in LiNbO3 at Optical Frequencies|last = Giordmaine|first = J.|journal = Phys. Rev. Lett.|doi = 10.1103/PhysRevLett.14.973|pmid = |access-date = |last2 = Miller|first2 = R.|publisher = APS|year = 1965|volume = 14|page = 973|bibcode = 1965PhRvL..14..973G }}</ref> five years after the invention of the laser, at Bell Labs. Optical parametric oscillators are used as coherent light sources for various scientific purposes, and to generate [[squeezed light]] for quantum mechanics research. A Soviet report was also published in 1965.<ref>Akhmanov SA, Kovrigin AI, Piskarskas AS, Fadeev VV, Khokhlov RV, Observation of parametric amplification in the optical range, JETP Letters 2, No.7, 191-193 (1965).</ref>
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