43 research outputs found
Ultrashort intense-field optical vortices produced with laser-etched mirrors
We introduce a simple and practical method to create ultrashort intense
optical vortices for applications involving high-intensity lasers. Our method
utilizes femtosecond laser pulses to laser-etch grating lines into
laser-quality gold mirrors. These grating lines holographically encode an
optical vortex. We derive mathematical equations for each individual grating
line to be etched, for any desired (integer) topological charge. We investigate
the smoothness of the etched grooves. We show that they are smooth enough to
produce optical vortices with an intensity that is only a few percent lower
than in the ideal case. We demonstrate that the etched gratings can be used in
a folded version of our 2f-2f setup [Mariyenko et al., Opt. Express 19, 7599
(2005)] to compensate angular dispersion. Lastly, we show that the etched
gratings withstand intensities of up to 10^12 W/cm2.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, submitted to Optics Expres
\u3ci\u3eIn Situ\u3c/i\u3e Measurement of Three-Dimensional Ion Densities in Focused Femtosecond Pulses
We image spatial distributions of Xeq+ ions in the focus of a laser beam of ultrashort, intense pulses in all three dimensions, with a resolution of ~3μm and ~12 μm in the two transverse directions. This allows for studying ionization processes without spatially averaging ion yields. Our in situ ion imaging is also useful to analyze focal intensity profiles and to investigate the transverse modal purity of tightly focused beams of complex light. As an example, the intensity profile of a Hermite-Gaussian beam mode HG1,0 recorded with ions is found to be in good agreement with optical images
Intense-Field Ionization of Monoaromatic Hydrocarbons using Radiation Pulses of Ultrashort Duration: Monohalobenzenes and Azabenzenes
Using 50-fs, 800-nm pulses, we study the intense-field ionization and fragmentation of the monohalobenzenes C_(6)H_(5)-X (X=F, Cl, Br, I) and of the heterocyclics azabenzene C5H5N (pyridine) and the three diazabenzenes C_(4)H_(4)N_(2) (pyridazine, pyrimidine, and pyrazine). Avoiding focal intensity averaging we find indications of resonance-enhanced MPI. In the monohalobenzenes the propensity for fragmentation increases for increasing Z: fluorobenzene yields predominantly C6H5Fn+, while iodobenzene yields atomic ions with charges up to I^(8+). We ascribe this to the heavy-atom effect: the large charge of the heavy halogens' nuclei induces ultrafast intersystem crossing to dissociative triplet states
Creation of optical vortices in femtosecond pulses
We experimentally created a femtosecond optical vortex using a pair of computer-synthesized holographic gratings arranged in a 2f - 2f optical setup. We present measurements showing that the resulting donut mode is free of spatial chirp, and support this finding with an analysis of the optical wave propagation through our system based on the Kirchhoff- Fresnel diffraction integral. An interferogram confirms that our ultrashort vortex has topological charge 1, and a conservative experimental estimation of its duration is 280 fs. We used 25-fs radiation pulses (bandwidth approximately 40 nm) produced by a Ti:sapphire laser oscillator
Frequency comb vernier spectroscopy in the near infrared
We perform femtosecond frequency comb vernier spectroscopy in the near
infrared with a femtosecond Er doped fiber laser, a scanning high-finesse
cavity and an InGaAs camera. By utilizing the properties of a frequency comb
and a scanning high-finesse cavity such spectroscopy provides broad spectral
bandwidth, high spectral resolution, and high detection sensitivity on a short
time scale. We achieved an absorption sensitivity of ~8E-8 cm-1Hz-1/2
corresponding to a detection limit of ~70 ppbv for acetylene, with a resolution
of ~1.1 GHz in single images taken in 0.5 seconds and covering a frequency
range of ~5 THz. These measurements have broad applications for sensing other
greenhouse gases in this fingerprint near IR region with a simple apparatus.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
Frame dragging with optical vortices
General Relativistic calculations in the linear regime have been made for
electromagnetic beams of radiation known as optical vortices. These exotic
beams of light carry a physical quantity known as optical orbital angular
momentum (OAM). It is found that when a massive spinning neutral particle is
placed along the optical axis, a phenomenon known as inertial frame dragging
occurs. Our results are compared with those found previously for a ring laser
and an order of magnitude estimate of the laser intensity needed for a
precession frequency of 1 Hz is given for these "steady" beams of light.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figure
\emph{In situ} measurement of three-dimensional ion densities in focused femtosecond pulses
We image spatial distributions of Xe ions in the focus of a laser beam
of ultrashort, intense pulses in all three dimensions, with a resolution of
3 m and 12 m in the two transverse directions. This
allows for studying ionization processes without spatially averaging ion
yields. Our \emph{in situ} ion imaging is also useful to analyze focal
intensity profiles and to investigate the transverse modal purity of tightly
focused beams of complex light. As an example, the intensity profile of a
Hermite-Gaussian beam mode HG recorded with ions is found to be in good
agreement with optical images.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Reconstruction of ionization probabilities from spatially averaged data in N-dimensions
We present an analytical inversion technique which can be used to recover
ionization probabilities from spatially averaged data in an N-dimensional
detection scheme. The solution is given as a power series in intensity. For
this reason, we call this technique a multiphoton expansion (MPE). The MPE
formalism was verified with an exactly solvable inversion problem in 2D, and
probabilities in the postsaturation region, where the intensity-selective
scanning approach breaks down, were recovered. In 3D, ionization probabilities
of Xe were successfully recovered with MPE from simulated (using the ADK
tunneling theory) ion yields. Finally, we tested our approach with
intensity-resolved benzene ion yields showing a resonant multiphoton ionization
process. By applying MPE to this data (which was artificially averaged) the
resonant structure was recovered-suggesting that the resonance in benzene may
have been observable in spatially averaged data taken elsewhere.Comment: 19 pages and 3 figure