74 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Hybrid soliton dynamics in liquid-core fibres
The discovery of optical solitons being understood as temporally and spectrally stationary optical states has enabled numerous innovations among which, most notably, supercontinuum light sources have become widely used in both fundamental and applied sciences. Here, we report on experimental evidence for dynamics of hybrid solitons—a new type of solitary wave, which emerges as a result of a strong non-instantaneous nonlinear response in CS2-filled liquid-core optical fibres. Octave-spanning supercontinua in the mid-infrared region are observed when pumping the hybrid waveguide with a 460 fs laser (1.95 μm) in the anomalous dispersion regime at nanojoule-level pulse energies. A detailed numerical analysis well correlated with the experiment uncovers clear indicators of emerging hybrid solitons, revealing their impact on the bandwidth, onset energy and noise characteristics of the supercontinua. Our study highlights liquid-core fibres as a promising platform for fundamental optics and applications towards novel coherent and reconfigurable light sources
Recommended from our members
Carbon chloride-core fibers for soliton mediated supercontinuum generation
We report on soliton-fission mediated infrared supercontinuum generation in liquid-core step-index fibers using highly transparent carbon chlorides (CCl4, C2Cl4). By developing models for the refractive index dispersions and nonlinear response functions, dispersion engineering and pumping with an ultrafast thulium fiber laser (300 fs) at 1.92 μm, distinct soliton fission and dispersive wave generation was observed, particularly in the case of tetrachloroethylene (C2Cl4). The measured results match simulations of both the generalized and a hybrid nonlinear Schrödinger equation, with the latter resembling the characteristics of non-instantaneous medium via a static potential term and representing a simulation tool with substantially reduced complexity. We show that C2Cl4 has the potential for observing non-instantaneous soliton dynamics along meters of liquid-core fiber opening a feasible route for directly observing hybrid soliton dynamics
Chandra and XMM-Newton X-ray observations of AWM 7 - I: Investigating X-ray surface brightness fluctuations
We investigate the levels of small scale structure in surface brightness
images of the core of the X-ray bright cool-core galaxy cluster AWM 7. After
subtraction of a model of the smooth cluster emission, we find a number of
approximately radial surface brightness depressions which are not present in
simulated images and are seen in both the Chandra and XMM-Newton data. The
depressions are most strongly seen in the south of the cluster and have a
magnitude of around 4 per cent in surface brightness. We see these features in
both an energy band sensitive to the density (0.6 to 5 keV) and a band more
sensitive to the pressure (3.5 to 7.5 keV). Histograms of surface brightness in
the data, when compared to realisations of a smooth model, reveal stronger
surface brightness variations. We use the Delta-variance technique to
characterise the magnitude of the fluctuations as a function of length scale.
We find that the spectrum in the 0.6 to 5 keV band is flatter than expected for
Kolmogorov index fluctuations. If characterised by a power spectrum, on large
scales it would have an index around -1.7, rather than -3.7. The implied 3D
density fluctuations have a standard deviation of around 4 per cent. The
implied 3D pressure variations are at most 4 per cent. Most of the longer-scale
power in the density spectrum is contributed by the southern half of the
cluster, where the depressions are seen. The density variations implied by the
spectrum of the northern sector have a standard deviation of about 2 per cent.Comment: 17 pages, accepted by MNRAS, high resolution version available at
http://www-xray.ast.cam.ac.uk/papers/awm7.pd
Hierarchical Stellar Structures in the Local Group Dwarf Galaxy NGC 6822
We present a comprehensive study of the star cluster population and the
hierarchical structure in the clustering of blue stars with ages <~ 500 Myr in
the Local Group dwarf irregular galaxy NGC 6822. Our observational material
comprises the most complete optical stellar catalog of the galaxy from imaging
with the Suprime-Cam at the 8.2-m SUBARU Telescope. We identify 47 distinct
star clusters with the application of the nearest-neighbor density method to
this catalog for a detection threshold of 3sigma above the average stellar
density. The size distribution of the detected clusters can be very well
approximated by a Gaussian with a peak at ~ 68 pc. Their cluster mass function
is fitted very well by a power-law with index alpha ~ 1.5 +/- 0.7, consistent
with other Local Group galaxies and the cluster initial mass function. The
application of the nearest-neighbor density method for various density
thresholds, other than 3sigma, enabled the identification of stellar
concentrations in various length-scales. The stellar density maps constructed
with this technique provide a direct proof of hierarchically structured stellar
concentrations in NGC 6822. We illustrate this hierarchy by the so-called
"dendrogram" of the detected stellar structures, which demonstrates that most
of the detected structures split up into several substructures over at least
three levels. We quantify the hierarchy of these structures with the use of the
minimum spanning tree method. The morphological hierarchy in stellar
clustering, which we observe in NGC 6822 resembles that of the turbulent
interstellar matter, suggesting that turbulence on pc- and kpc-scales has been
probably the major agent that regulated clustered star formation in NGC 6822.Comment: 18 pages in ApJ two-column format, 13 figure
Gas and dust in a z=2.8 obscured quasar
We present new detections of the CO(5-4), CO(7-6), [CI](1-0) and [CI](2-1)
molecular and atomic line transitions towards the unlensed, obscured quasar
AMS12 (z=2.7672), observed with the IRAM PdBI. This is the first unlensed, high
redshift source to have both [CI] transitions detected. Continuum measurements
between 70 m and 3 mm are used to constrain the FIR SED, and we find a
best fit FIR luminosity of log[Lfir/Lsol] = 13.5+/-0.1, dust temperature T_d =
88+/-8 K and emissivity index {\beta} = 0.6+/-0.1. The highly-excited molecular
gas probed by CO(3-2), (5-4) and (7-6), is modelled with large velocity
gradient (LVG) models. The gas kinetic temperature T_g, density n(H2), and the
characteristic size r0, are determined using the dust temperature from the FIR
SED as a prior for the gas temperature. The best fitting parameters are T_g =
90+/-8 K, n(H2) = 10^(3.9+/-0.1) cm^(-3) and r0 = 0.8+/-0.04 kpc. The ratio of
the [CI] lines gives a [CI] excitation temperature of 43+/-10 K, indicating the
[CI] and the high-excitation CO are not in thermal equilibrium. The [CI]
excitation temperature is below that of T_d and T_g of the high-excitation CO,
perhaps because [CI] lies at a larger radius where there may also be a large
reservoir of CO at a cooler temperature, perhaps detectable through the
CO(1-0). Using the [CI](1-0) line we can estimate the strength of the CO(1-0)
line and hence the gas mass. This suggests that a significant fraction (~30%)
of the molecular gas is missed from the high-excitation line analysis. The
Eddington limited black hole mass is found from the bolometric luminosity to be
Mbh >~ 1.5x10^9 Msol. Along with the stellar mass of 3x10^11 Msol, these give a
black hole - bulge mass ratio of Mbh/Mbulge >~ 0.005. This is in agreement with
studies on the evolution of the Mbh/Mbulge relationship at high redshifts,
which find a departure from the local value ~0.002.Comment: Accepted by MNRAS, 17 pages, 9 figure
The Temperature Distribution of Dense Molecular Gas in the Center of NGC 253
[abridged] We present interferometric maps of ammonia (NH3) of the nearby
starburst galaxy NGC 253 [star formation rate: ~2.8 Mo yr^(-1)]. The
observations have been taken with the Australia Telescope Compact Array and
include the para-NH3 (1,1), (2,2), and the ortho-NH3 (3,3) and (6,6) inversion
lines. Six major complexes of dense ammonia are identified, three of them on
either side of the starburst center, out to projected galactocentric radii of
\~250 pc. [...] The application of radiative transfer large velocity gradient
models reveals that the bulk of the ammonia molecules is embedded in a
one-temperature gas phase. Kinetic temperatures of this gas are ~200 and 140 K
toward the south-west and north-east [of the nucleus of NGC 253], respectively.
The temperatures under which ammonia was formed in the past are with >~30 K
also warmer toward the south-west than toward the north-east (~15-20 K). This
is indicated by the ortho-to-para ammonia ratio which is ~1 and 1.5-2.5 toward
the south-west and north-east, respectively. Ammonia column densities in the
brightest complexes are in the range of 6-11x10^(14) cm^(-2), which adds up to
a total ammonia mass of ~20 Mo, about evenly distributed toward both sides of
the nucleus. [...] Toward the center of NGC 253, NH3 (1,1), (2,2), and (6,6) is
detected in absorption against an unresolved continuum source. At the same
location, however, ammonia (3,3) is found in emission which indicates maser
activity. This would be the first detected extragalactic NH3 maser. Evidence
for an expanding shell in the south-western complex is provided. [...] The
shell and X-ray properties can be reproduced by the energy input of a highly
obscured young stellar cluster with a mass of ~10^5 Mo which also heats the
dense gas.Comment: 42 pages including 13 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Thermal analysis of Yb-doped high-power fiber amplifiers with Al:P co-doped cores
It has been recently shown that photodarkening can significantly reduce the modeinstability threshold in high power Yb-doped fiber amplifiers, thus resulting in an even moresevere limitation to the scaling of the output average power of these systems. Therefore, anefficient reduction of photodarkening in an Yb-doped active fiber will lead to very significantgains in the output average power delivered by such systems. In this context, it has beenreported that photodarkening can be significantly mitigated when co-doping a fiber core withAl and P, which makes this approach potentially appealing to increase the TMI threshold.Unfortunately co-doping the fiber core with Al and P also alters the effective cross-sections ofthe fiber, which has repercussion in the amplification efficiency. Thus, a fiber with a higher Pconcentration will exhibit lower cross-sections, therefore requiring a higher Yb-ionconcentration to reach a certain desired amplification efficiency. However, increasing the Ybionconcentration leads to higher photodarkening losses, which might potentially counteractthe benefits of using P co-doping. In this paper we present a comparative analysis of theexpected performance of different fiber amplifiers for a given constant average heat-load andamplification efficiency as a function of the ratio of Al:P concentration in the fiber core. Thisstudy indicates which core compositions are more beneficial for increasing the modeinstability threshold in Yb-doped high-power fiber amplifier systems
Self-efficiency improvement and cooling in thulium-doped fibers
A way to increase the efficiency of Thulium-doped fiber systems and simultaneously prevent the generation of heat by pumping the excited state around 1460nm has been recently proposed by the authors. In this contribution we show that a Thulium-doped fiber amplifier can lase around 1460nm while simultaneously amplifying signals around similar to 2 mu m. Such an operation results in considerably higher amplification efficiencies and in lower operating temperatures without the need for an external pump around 1460nm
Efficiency improvement in Thulium-doped fibers via excited state pumping
In this contribution we propose a new way to simultaneously increase (almost double) the amplification efficiency and reduce the thermal issues of Thulium-doped fibers. This technique is based on pumping the excited state of the Thulium fiber, in order to bring the ions from the pump level to the upper laser level via stimulated emission instead of via phononic relaxation processes. Our simulations show that using this technique the efficiency of the amplification process can be increased by almost a factor of 2
Watt-Scale Super-Octave Mid-Infrared Intrapulse Difference Frequency Generation
The development of high-power, broadband sources of coherent mid-infrared radiation is currently the subject of intense research that is driven by a substantial number of existing and continuously emerging applications in medical diagnostics, spectroscopy, microscopy, and fundamental science. One of the major, long-standing challenges in improving the performance of these applications has been the construction of compact, broadband mid-infrared radiation sources, which unify the properties of high brightness and spatial and temporal coherence. Due to the lack of such radiation sources, several emerging applications can be addressed only with infrared (IR)-beamlines in large-scale synchrotron facilities, which are limited regarding user access and only partially fulfill these properties. Here, we present a table-top, broadband, coherent mid-infrared light source that provides brightness at an unprecedented level that supersedes that of synchrotrons in the wavelength range between 3.7 and 18 µm by several orders of magnitude. This result is enabled by a high-power, few-cycle Tm-doped fiber laser system, which is employed as a pump at 1.9 µm wavelength for intrapulse difference frequency generation (IPDFG). IPDFG intrinsically ensures the formation of carrier-envelope-phase stable pulses, which provide ideal prerequisites for state-of-the-art spectroscopy and microscopy
- …