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: P03.00002 : Nonlinear optical effects in all-bulk multipass cells and their applications
11:00 AM–11:30 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Oleg Pronin
(Helmut Schmidt University (University of the German Federal Armed Forces, Hamburg))
Nonlinear optical phenomena involving ultrashort pulses such as spectral
broadening, soliton self-compression and soliton Raman self-frequency
shifting (SRSFS) are usually realized in solid-core photonic crystal,
gas-filled photonic bandgap or hollow-core fibers. Implementations of these
nonlinear effects strongly rely on extended propagation which, until
recently, was only possible in fibers. A new method based on propagation in
a periodic quasi-waveguide structure comprised of focusing elements and
nonlinear media was lately demonstrated. Practically the scheme is realized
by placing a nonlinear medium such as an anti-reflection coated fused silica
plate inside a Herriott-type multi-pass cell (HC). In contrast to fibers,
the sign of the overall net dispersion and its profile, including higher
order dispersion terms, can be readily engineered by dielectric coatings
tailored for the application. We show that this dispersion engineering
enables the experimental demonstration of pure SPM spectral broadening,
SRSFS and soliton self-compression. As main driving laser sources we use
100~W-level Kerr-lens mode-locked thin-disk Yb:YAG oscillators operating at
1030~nm central wavelength, 5-15~microjoules pulse energies and 200-300~fs
pulse durations. For example, spectral broadening and subsequent pulse
compression by means of dispersive mirrors in several HCs stages results in
sub-15~fs pulses. Alternatively, self-compression of 300~fs pulses down to
30~fs is possible inside a single HC stage adjusted for a slightly negative
net group delay dispersion. Additionally, for the first time to the best of
our knowledge, SRSFS at high-energy (over 1~microjoule) is demonstrated.
Generally, the overall losses strongly depend on the magnitude of the
spectral broadening and are usually in the 5-30 percent range.
HCs are known for being insensitive to the input laser beam pointing and for
preserving this beam pointing at the output. These properties in combination
with the dispersion engineering make this new method of exploring nonlinear
phenomena highly interesting for research and industrial applications.