It is demonstrated that RF current modulation of a frequency stabilized
injection-locked diode laser allows the stabilization of an optical cavity to
adjustable lengths, by variation of the RF frequency. This transfer cavity may
be used to stabilize another laser at an arbitrary wavelength, in the absence
of atomic or molecular transitions suitable for stabilization. Implementation
involves equipment and techniques commonly used in laser cooling and trapping
laboratories, and does not require electro- or acousto-optic modulators. With
this technique we stabilize a transfer cavity using a RF current-modulated
diode laser which is injection locked to a 780 nm reference diode laser. The
reference laser is stabilized using polarization spectroscopy in a Rb cell. A
Ti:sapphire ring laser at 960 nm is locked to this transfer cavity and may be
precisely scanned by varying the RF modulation frequency. We demonstrate the
suitability of this system for the excitation of laser cooled Rb atoms to
Rydberg states