APS March Meeting 2010
Volume 55, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 15–19, 2010;
Portland, Oregon
Session Q27: Focus Session: New Trends in Spectroscopy III
11:15 AM–2:15 PM,
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Room: D137
Sponsoring
Unit:
DCP
Chair: David Osborn, Sandia National Laboratories
Abstract ID: BAPS.2010.MAR.Q27.7
Abstract: Q27.00007 : Molecular Spectroscopy with Frequency Combs
1:15 PM–1:51 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Ian Coddington
(NIST Boulder)
Pulsed femtosecond frequency combs are rapidly developing as a
powerful
spectroscopic tool. As a spectroscopic source stabilized
frequency combs
potentially offer broad spectral coverage, near perfect frequency
accuracy,
low timing jitter and broadband compatibility with resonant
cavities. This
talk will focus on the first three advantages in a dual comb
spectroscopic
technique that is highly analogous to traditional Fourier transform
spectroscopy.
In the dual comb approach, (pioneered in the THz by Keilmann, Van
der Weide
and coworkers under the name multi-heterodyne spectroscopy), one
comb is
used to sample a gas and a second frequency comb serves as a local
oscillator (LO) that samples the first comb. The LO is held at a
slightly
different repetition rate than the first comb. When viewed in the
time
domain, the comb sources each emit a train of pulses. With the
difference in
repetition rates, for each successive pair of pulses, the timing
between the
sample and LO laser pulses shifts slightly. Through successive
measurements,
the LO pulses read out the entire time domain structure of the
transmitted
sample pulse. Through a Fourier transform, we recover the broadband,
complex, absorption profile of the sample gas. In analogy to a
Fourier
transform spectrometer the LO serves as a scanning interferometer
arm. The
removal of moving parts from the system along with the addition
of high
brightness collimated sources brings new flexibility to FTIR
spectroscopy.
This talk will focus on strengths and limitations of the dual comb
technique. Specifically we focus on comb stabilization techniques
that allow
for long averaging periods, firmware based averaging techniques
that keep
data sizes manageable and allow for realtime data processing,
time domain
multiplexing of signal and reference data for continuous removal
of system
drift, and difference frequency generation techniques to extend
this system
into the mid IR. We will also discuss methods to improve the
sensitivity of
this technique as well as tradeoffs between sensitivity and
resolution,
while maintaining the inherent frequency accuracy of this system.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2010.MAR.Q27.7