The appeal of lasers can be attributed to both their ubiquitous applications
and their role as model systems for elucidating nonequilibrium and cooperative
phenomena. Introducing novel concepts in lasers thus has a potential for both
applied and fundamental implications. Here we experimentally demonstrate that
the coupling between carrier spin and light polarization in common
semiconductor lasers can enable room-temperature modulation frequencies above
200 GHz, exceeding by nearly an order of magnitude the best conventional
semiconductor lasers. Surprisingly, this ultrafast operation relies on a short
carrier spin relaxation time and a large anisotropy of the refractive index,
both commonly viewed as detrimental in spintronics and conventional lasers. Our
results overcome the key speed limitations of conventional directly modulated
lasers and offer a prospect for the next generation of low-energy ultrafast
optical communication.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure