The Generation of Ultrashort Laser Pulses The importance

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The Generation of Ultrashort Laser Pulses The importance of bandwidth More than just a

The Generation of Ultrashort Laser Pulses The importance of bandwidth More than just a light bulb Laser modes and mode-locking Making shorter and shorter pulses Pulse-pumping Q-switching and distributed-feedback lasers Passive mode-locking and the saturable absorber Kerr-lensing and Ti: Sapphire Active mode-locking Other mode-locking techniques Limiting factors Commercial lasers

P 3 LAS 2010 Femtosekundové lasery Slajdy : Prof Rick TREBINO, Kurz Utrafast optics,

P 3 LAS 2010 Femtosekundové lasery Slajdy : Prof Rick TREBINO, Kurz Utrafast optics, Georgia Tech, USA

But first: the progress has been amazing! 10 ps Nd: glass Nd: YAG SHORTEST

But first: the progress has been amazing! 10 ps Nd: glass Nd: YAG SHORTEST PULSE DURATION Dye S-P Dye Nd: YLF Diode 1 ps CW Dye Color Center 100 fs Cr: Li. S(C)AF Er: fiber CP M Dye Nd: fiber Cr: YAG Cr: forsterite 10 fs w/Compression Ti: sapphire 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 YEAR 1990 1995 2000 2005 The shortest pulse vs. year (for different media)

Continuous vs. ultrashort pulses of light A constant and a delta-function are a Fourier-Transform

Continuous vs. ultrashort pulses of light A constant and a delta-function are a Fourier-Transform pair. Irradiance vs. time Spectrum time frequency Continuous beam: Ultrashort pulse:

Long vs. short pulses of light The uncertainty principle says that the product of

Long vs. short pulses of light The uncertainty principle says that the product of the temporal and spectral pulse widths is greater than ~1. Irradiance vs. time Spectrum time frequency Long pulse Short pulse

For many years, dyes have been the broadband media that have generated ultrashort laser

For many years, dyes have been the broadband media that have generated ultrashort laser pulses.

Ultrafast solid-state laser media have recently replaced dyes in most labs. Laser power Solid-state

Ultrafast solid-state laser media have recently replaced dyes in most labs. Laser power Solid-state laser media have broad bandwidths and are convenient.

Light bulbs, lasers, and ultrashort pulses But a light bulb is also broadband. What

Light bulbs, lasers, and ultrashort pulses But a light bulb is also broadband. What exactly is required to make an ultrashort pulse? Answer: A Mode-locked Laser Okay, what’s a laser, what are modes, and what does it mean to lock them?

Generating short pulses = mode-locking Locking the phases of the laser modes yields an

Generating short pulses = mode-locking Locking the phases of the laser modes yields an ultrashort pulse.

Locked modes Intensities

Locked modes Intensities

Numerical simulation of mode-locking Ultrafast lasers often have thousands of modes.

Numerical simulation of mode-locking Ultrafast lasers often have thousands of modes.

A generic ultrashort-pulse laser A generic ultrafast laser has a broadband gain medium, a

A generic ultrashort-pulse laser A generic ultrafast laser has a broadband gain medium, a pulseshortening device, and two or more mirrors: Mode-locker Many pulse-shortening devices have been proposed and used.

Passive mode-locking: the saturable absorber For a twolevel system Like a sponge, an absorbing

Passive mode-locking: the saturable absorber For a twolevel system Like a sponge, an absorbing medium can only absorb so much. High-intensity spikes burn through; low-intensity light is absorbed.

The effect of a saturable absorber Intensity First, imagine raster-scanning the pulse vs. time

The effect of a saturable absorber Intensity First, imagine raster-scanning the pulse vs. time like this: Short time (fs) d un Ro k=1 k=2 k=3 ps tri k=7 ) (k Notice that the weak pulses are suppressed, and the strong pulse shortens and is amplified. After many round trips, even a slightly saturable absorber can yield a very short pulse.

Passive mode -locking: the saturable absorber High-intensity spikes (i. e. , short pulses) see

Passive mode -locking: the saturable absorber High-intensity spikes (i. e. , short pulses) see less loss and hence can lase while lowintensity backgrounds (i. e. , long pulses) won’t.

Passive mode-locking with a slow saturable absorber What if the absorber responds slowly (more

Passive mode-locking with a slow saturable absorber What if the absorber responds slowly (more slowly than the pulse)? Then only the leading edge will experience pulse shortening. This is the most common situation, unless the pulse is many ps long.

Gain saturation shortens the pulse trailing edge. The intense spike uses up the laser

Gain saturation shortens the pulse trailing edge. The intense spike uses up the laser gain-medium energy, reducing the gain available for the trailing edge of the pulse (and for later pulses).

Saturable gain and loss Lasers lase when the gain exceeds the loss. The combination

Saturable gain and loss Lasers lase when the gain exceeds the loss. The combination of saturable absorption and saturable gain yields short pulses even when the absorber is slower than the pulse.

The Passively Mode-locked Dye Laser Pump beam Saturable absorber Gain medium Passively mode-locked dye

The Passively Mode-locked Dye Laser Pump beam Saturable absorber Gain medium Passively mode-locked dye lasers yield pulses as short as a few hundred fs. They’re limited by our ability to saturate the absorber.

Some common dyes and their corresponding saturable absorbers

Some common dyes and their corresponding saturable absorbers

Colliding pulses have a higher peak intensity. Intensity Two pulses colliding Single pulse Longitudinal

Colliding pulses have a higher peak intensity. Intensity Two pulses colliding Single pulse Longitudinal position, z And higher intensity in the saturable absorber is what CPM lasers require.

The colliding-pulse modelocked (CPM) laser A Sagnac interferometer is ideal for creating colliding pulses.

The colliding-pulse modelocked (CPM) laser A Sagnac interferometer is ideal for creating colliding pulses. Saturable absorber Gain medium Beamsplitter CPM dye lasers produce even shorter pulses: ~30 fs.

A lens and a lens A lens is a lens because the phase delay

A lens and a lens A lens is a lens because the phase delay seen by a beam varies with x: x L(x) In both cases, a quadratic variation of the phase with x yields a lens. f(x) = n k L(x) Now what if L is constant, but n varies with x: f(x) = n(x) k L n(x) x

Kerr-lens mode-locking A medium’s refractive index depends on the intensity. n(I) = n 0

Kerr-lens mode-locking A medium’s refractive index depends on the intensity. n(I) = n 0 + n 2 I If the pulse is more intense in the center, it induces a lens. Placing an aperture at the focus favors a short pulse. Losses are too high for a lowintensity cw mode to lase, but not for high-intensity fs pulse. Kerr-lensing is the mode-locking mechanism of the Ti: Sapphire laser.

Kerr-lensing is a type of saturable absorber. If a pulse experiences additional focusing due

Kerr-lensing is a type of saturable absorber. If a pulse experiences additional focusing due to high intensity and the nonlinear refractive index, and we align the laser for this extra focusing, then a high-intensity beam will have better overlap with the gain medium. High-intensity pulse Ti: Sapph Low-intensity pulse This is a type of saturable absorption. Mirror Additional focusing optics can arrange for perfect overlap of the high-intensity beam back in the Ti: Sapphire crystal. But not the lowintensity beam!

Modeling Kerr-lens mode-locking

Modeling Kerr-lens mode-locking

Titanium Sapphire (Ti: Sapphire) Ti: Sapphire is currently the workhorse laser of the ultrafast

Titanium Sapphire (Ti: Sapphire) Ti: Sapphire is currently the workhorse laser of the ultrafast community, emitting pulses as short as a few fs and average power in excess of a Watt. Al 2 O 3 lattice oxygen aluminum

Titanium Sapphire Absorption and emission spectra of Ti: Sapphire It can be pumped with

Titanium Sapphire Absorption and emission spectra of Ti: Sapphire It can be pumped with a (continuous) Argon laser (~450 -515 nm) or a doubled. Nd laser (~532 nm). (nm) Upper level lifetime: 3. 2 msec Ti: Sapphire lases from ~700 nm to ~1000 nm.

Mechanisms that limit pulse shortening The universe conspires to lengthen pulses. Gain narrowing: G(w)

Mechanisms that limit pulse shortening The universe conspires to lengthen pulses. Gain narrowing: G(w) = exp(-aw 2), then after N passes, the spectrum will narrow by GN(w) = exp(-Naw 2), which is narrower by N 1/2 Group-velocity dispersion: GVD spreads the pulse in time. And everything has GVD… All fs lasers incorporate dispersion-compensating components. We’ll spend several lectures discussing GVD!! Etalon effects: This yields multiple pulses, spreading the energy over time, weakening the pulses.

The Ti: Sapphire laser including dispersion compensation Adding two prisms compensates for dispersion in

The Ti: Sapphire laser including dispersion compensation Adding two prisms compensates for dispersion in the Ti: Sapphire crystal and mirrors. Ti: Sapphire gain medium cw pump beam Slit for tuning Prism dispersion compensator This is currently the workhorse laser of the ultrafast optics community.

Commercial fs lasers Ti: Sapphire Coherent: Mira (<35 fs pulse length, 1 W ave

Commercial fs lasers Ti: Sapphire Coherent: Mira (<35 fs pulse length, 1 W ave power), Chameleon (Hands-free, ~100 fs pulse length), Spectra-Physics: Tsunami (<35 fs pulse length, 1 W ave power) Mai Tai (Hands-free, ~100 fs pulse length)

Very-short-pulse commercial fs lasers Ti: Sapphire KM Labs < 20 fs and < $20

Very-short-pulse commercial fs lasers Ti: Sapphire KM Labs < 20 fs and < $20 K Femtolasers As short as 8 fs!

Commercial fs lasers (cont’d)

Commercial fs lasers (cont’d)

Ytterbium Tungstate (Yb: KGW) They also offer other attractive properties, such as a very

Ytterbium Tungstate (Yb: KGW) They also offer other attractive properties, such as a very high thermal efficiency and high average power. Amplitude Systemes Model Ytterbium doped laser materials can be directly diode-pumped, eliminating the need for an intermediate (green) pump laser used in Ti: Sapphire lasers. t-Pulse 20 t-Pulse 100 t-Pulse 200 Pulse energy (n. J) 20 100 200 Average power (W) 1 1 2 Repetition rate (MHz) 50 10 10

Active mode-locking Any amplitude modulator can preferentially induce losses for times other than that

Active mode-locking Any amplitude modulator can preferentially induce losses for times other than that of the intended pulse peak. This produces short pulses. It can be used to start a Ti: Sapphire laser mode-locking.

Gain switching Modulating the gain rapidly is essentially the same as active mode-locking. This

Gain switching Modulating the gain rapidly is essentially the same as active mode-locking. This method is a common one for mode-locking semiconductor lasers.

Synchronous pumping Pumping the gain medium with a train of already short pulses yields

Synchronous pumping Pumping the gain medium with a train of already short pulses yields a train of even shorter pulses. Short pulses (ps) Pump beam The laser roundtrip time must precisely match that of the train of pump pulses! Saturable absorber Gain medium Trains of 60 ps pulses from a Nd: YAG laser can yield <1 ps pulses from a sync-pumped dye laser.

Hybrid mode-locking is any type of mode-locking incorporating two or more techniques simultaneously. Sync-pumping

Hybrid mode-locking is any type of mode-locking incorporating two or more techniques simultaneously. Sync-pumping and passive mode-locking Active and passive mode-locking However, using two lousy methods together doesn’t really work all that much better than one good method.

Diode lasers use hybrid mode-locking Autocorrelation Haneda, et al, UP 2004 Spectrum

Diode lasers use hybrid mode-locking Autocorrelation Haneda, et al, UP 2004 Spectrum

Additive-pulse mode-locking Nonlinear effects in an external cavity can yield a phasedistorted pulse, which

Additive-pulse mode-locking Nonlinear effects in an external cavity can yield a phasedistorted pulse, which can be combined in phase with the pulse in the main cavity, yielding cancellation in the wings, and hence pulse-shortening. Early fiber lasers used this mechanism.

The soliton laser Nonlinear-optical effects can compensate for dispersion, yielding a soliton, which can

The soliton laser Nonlinear-optical effects can compensate for dispersion, yielding a soliton, which can be very short and remain very short, despite dispersion and nonlinear-optical effects.

Commercial fs fiber lasers Erbium Menlo Systems 150 fs; 150 m. W IMRA America

Commercial fs fiber lasers Erbium Menlo Systems 150 fs; 150 m. W IMRA America Frequency-doubled

Pump lasers for ultrafast lasers Previously, only the Argon Ion laser was available, but

Pump lasers for ultrafast lasers Previously, only the Argon Ion laser was available, but much more stable intracavity-frequency-doubled solid-state lasers are now available.