50th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics APS Meeting
Volume 64, Number 4
Monday–Friday, May 27–31, 2019;
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Session P03: Ultrafast Sources and Techniques
10:30 AM–12:30 PM,
Thursday, May 30, 2019
Wisconsin Center
Room: 101CD
Chair: Carlos Trallero, University of Connecticut
Abstract: P03.00001 : Concepts for scaling peak power {\&} average power of few-cycle laser sources
10:30 AM–11:00 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Bruno Schmidt
(few-cycle Inc.)
Strong field driven processes can best controlled with carrier envelope
phase stabilized laser pulses consisting only of a few oscillations of the
electric filed.
The most straight forward and therefore most widespread way to reach this
goal is post-compression of multicycle lasers. Especially at high powers,
hollow-core fibers (HCF) became the work horse in the strong filed
community. Even though more complex, an alternative route are laser sources
that directly emit pulses with as little as only two optical cycles at FWHM
of the envelope.
We are simultaneously pushing both competing approaches to investigate their
corresponding pros and cons at the highest performance level.
On the HCF side, we demonstrated transmission efficiencies between 70-80{\%}
for several meter long HCFs enabling single step compression factors
\textgreater 30 [1]. Current tests for power scaling are at the level of
50mJ energy for 200fs input pulses or beyond 300W of average power,
respectively.
For much higher peak powers, the HCF might become impractically long, thus
other solutions are desired. Therefore, we developed the approach of
frequency domain optical parametric amplification (FOPA) [2]. This concept
holds the current world record of IR few-cycle laser sources with an output
energy of 30mJ within 2 cycle duration (12fs) at 1.8\textmu m wavelength
[3]. We will also discuss prospects and difficulties dealing with half kW
(500W) level Yb laser sources as the pump for the FOPA [4].
[1] ``Direct compression of 170-fs 50-cycle pulses down to 1.5 cycles with
70{\%} transmission'', Jeong et al. Scientific reports 8, 11794 (2018).
[2] ``Frequency domain optical parametric amplification'', Schmidt et al.
Nat. Commun. 5, 3643 (2014)
[3] ``2.5 TW, two-cycle IR laser pulses via frequency domain optical
parametric amplification'', Gruson et al., Opt. Exp. 25, 27706 (2017).
[4] ``Highly stable, 54mJ Yb-InnoSlab laser platform at 0.5 kW average
power'', Schmidt et al., Opt. Exp. 25, 17549 (2017).