“…The technique of injection-locking, in which light from one (master) laser is injected into the cavity of the slave laser, arises as a promising tool for improving various aspects of photonic components, as well as for realization of novel all-optical ones. One of the historically first noticed benefits of injection-locking is frequency chirping, linewidth, and relative intensity noise reduction in directly modulated lasers [1][2][3]. However, the concept of intermodal injection-locking, in which light from the master laser is injected with a frequency close to one of the slave laser's side-modes, paved the way for utilizing this technique for wavelength conversion [4], transmitter design for wavelength-division-multiplexing passive optical networks (WDM PONs) [5], Radio-over-Fiber systems [6], improved CATV transmission [7], all-optical memories [8], all-optical regenerators [9], or conversion of advanced modulation formats [10].…”