160 research outputs found
Mid-infrared frequency comb generation via cascaded quadratic nonlinearities in quasi-phase-matched waveguides
We experimentally demonstrate a simple configuration for mid-infrared (MIR)
frequency comb generation in quasi-phase-matched lithium niobate waveguides
using the cascaded- nonlinearity. With nanojoule-scale pulses from
an Er:fiber laser, we observe octave-spanning supercontinuum in the
near-infrared with dispersive-wave generation in the 2.5--3 \text{\mu}m
region and intra-pulse difference-frequency generation in the 4--5
\text{\mu}m region. By engineering the quasi-phase-matched grating profiles,
tunable, narrow-band MIR and broadband MIR spectra are both observed in this
geometry. Finally, we perform numerical modeling using a nonlinear envelope
equation, which shows good quantitative agreement with the experiment---and can
be used to inform waveguide designs to tailor the MIR frequency combs. Our
results identify a path to a simple single-branch approach to mid-infrared
frequency comb generation in a compact platform using commercial Er:fiber
technology
A Kerr-microresonator optical clockwork
Kerr microresonators generate interesting and useful fundamental states of
electromagnetic radiation through nonlinear interactions of continuous-wave
(CW) laser light. Using photonic-integration techniques, functional devices
with low noise, small size, low-power consumption, scalable fabrication, and
heterogeneous combinations of photonics and electronics can be realized. Kerr
solitons, which stably circulate in a Kerr microresonator, have emerged as a
source of coherent, ultrafast pulse trains and ultra-broadband
optical-frequency combs. Using the f-2f technique, Kerr combs support
carrier-envelope-offset phase stabilization for optical synthesis and
metrology. In this paper, we introduce a Kerr-microresonator optical clockwork
based on optical-frequency division (OFD), which is a powerful technique to
transfer the fractional-frequency stability of an optical clock to a lower
frequency electronic clock signal. The clockwork presented here is based on a
silicon-nitride (SiN) microresonator that supports an optical-frequency
comb composed of soliton pulses at 1 THz repetition rate. By electro-optic
phase modulation of the entire SiN comb, we arbitrarily generate
additional CW modes between the SiN comb modes; operationally, this
reduces the pulse train repetition frequency and can be used to implement OFD
to the microwave domain. Our experiments characterize the residual frequency
noise of this Kerr-microresonator clockwork to one part in , which
opens the possibility of using Kerr combs with high performance optical clocks.
In addition, the photonic integration and 1 THz resolution of the SiN
frequency comb makes it appealing for broadband, low-resolution liquid-phase
absorption spectroscopy, which we demonstrate with near infrared measurements
of water, lipids, and organic solvents
Direct Visualization of Laser-Driven Electron Multiple Scattering and Tunneling Distance in Strong-Field Ionization
Using a simple model of strong-field ionization of atoms that generalizes the well-known 3-step model from 1D to 3D, we show that the experimental photoelectron angular distributions resulting from laser ionization of xenon and argon display prominent structures that correspond to electrons that pass by their parent ion more than once before strongly scattering. The shape of these structures can be associated with the specific number of times the electron is driven past its parent ion in the laser field before scattering. Furthermore, a careful analysis of the cutoff energy of the structures allows us to experimentally measure the distance between the electron and ion at the moment of tunnel ionization. This work provides new physical insight into how atoms ionize in strong laser fields and has implications for further efforts to extract atomic and molecular dynamics from strong-field physics
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