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Ultrashort pulse

In optics, an ultrashort pulse, also known as an ultrafast event, is an electromagnetic pulse whose time duration is of the order of a picosecond (10−12 second) or less. Such pulses have a broadband optical spectrum, and can be created by mode-locked oscillators. Amplification of ultrashort pulses almost always requires the technique of chirped pulse amplification, in order to avoid damage to the gain medium of the amplifier.

They are characterized by a high peak intensity (or more correctly, irradiance) that usually leads to nonlinear interactions in various materials, including air. These processes are studied in the field of nonlinear optics.

In the specialized literature, "ultrashort" refers to the femtosecond (fs) and picosecond (ps) range, although such pulses no longer hold the record for the shortest pulses artificially generated. Indeed, x-ray pulses with durations on the attosecond time scale have been reported.

The 1999 Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded to Ahmed H. Zewail, for the use of ultrashort pulses to observe chemical reactions at the timescales on which they occur,[1] opening up the field of femtochemistry. A further Nobel prize, the 2023 Nobel Prize in Physics, was also awarded for ultrashort pulses. This prize was awarded to Pierre Agostini, Ferenc Krausz, and Anne L'Huillier for the development of attosecond pulses and their ability to probe electron dynamics.[2]

Definition edit

 
A positively chirped ultrashort pulse of light in the time domain.

There is no standard definition of ultrashort pulse. Usually the attribute 'ultrashort' applies to pulses with a duration of a few tens of femtoseconds, but in a larger sense any pulse which lasts less than a few picoseconds can be considered ultrashort. The distinction between "Ultrashort" and "Ultrafast" is necessary as the speed at which the pulse propagates is a function of the index of refraction of the medium through which it travels, whereas "Ultrashort" refers to the temporal width of the pulse wavepacket.[3]

A common example is a chirped Gaussian pulse, a wave whose field amplitude follows a Gaussian envelope and whose instantaneous phase has a frequency sweep.

Background edit

The real electric field corresponding to an ultrashort pulse is oscillating at an angular frequency ω0 corresponding to the central wavelength of the pulse. To facilitate calculations, a complex field E(t) is defined. Formally, it is defined as the analytic signal corresponding to the real field.

The central angular frequency ω0 is usually explicitly written in the complex field, which may be separated as a temporal intensity function I(t) and a temporal phase function ψ(t):

 

The expression of the complex electric field in the frequency domain is obtained from the Fourier transform of E(t):

 

Because of the presence of the   term, E(ω) is centered around ω0, and it is a common practice to refer to E(ω-ω0) by writing just E(ω), which we will do in the rest of this article.

Just as in the time domain, an intensity and a phase function can be defined in the frequency domain:

 

The quantity   is the power spectral density (or simply, the spectrum) of the pulse, and   is the phase spectral density (or simply spectral phase). Example of spectral phase functions include the case where   is a constant, in which case the pulse is called a bandwidth-limited pulse, or where   is a quadratic function, in which case the pulse is called a chirped pulse because of the presence of an instantaneous frequency sweep. Such a chirp may be acquired as a pulse propagates through materials (like glass) and is due to their dispersion. It results in a temporal broadening of the pulse.

The intensity functions—temporal   and spectral   —determine the time duration and spectrum bandwidth of the pulse. As stated by the uncertainty principle, their product (sometimes called the time-bandwidth product) has a lower bound. This minimum value depends on the definition used for the duration and on the shape of the pulse. For a given spectrum, the minimum time-bandwidth product, and therefore the shortest pulse, is obtained by a transform-limited pulse, i.e., for a constant spectral phase  . High values of the time-bandwidth product, on the other hand, indicate a more complex pulse.

Pulse shape control edit

Although optical devices also used for continuous light, like beam expanders and spatial filters, may be used for ultrashort pulses, several optical devices have been specifically designed for ultrashort pulses. One of them is the pulse compressor,[4] a device that can be used to control the spectral phase of ultrashort pulses. It is composed of a sequence of prisms, or gratings. When properly adjusted it can alter the spectral phase φ(ω) of the input pulse so that the output pulse is a bandwidth-limited pulse with the shortest possible duration. A pulse shaper can be used to make more complicated alterations on both the phase and the amplitude of ultrashort pulses.

To accurately control the pulse, a full characterization of the pulse spectral phase is a must in order to get certain pulse spectral phase (such as transform-limited). Then, a spatial light modulator can be used in the 4f plane to control the pulse. Multiphoton intrapulse interference phase scan (MIIPS) is a technique based on this concept. Through the phase scan of the spatial light modulator, MIIPS can not only characterize but also manipulate the ultrashort pulse to get the needed pulse shape at target spot (such as transform-limited pulse for optimized peak power, and other specific pulse shapes). If the pulse shaper is fully calibrated, this technique allows controlling the spectral phase of ultrashort pulses using a simple optical setup with no moving parts. However the accuracy of MIIPS is somewhat limited with respect to other techniques, such as frequency-resolved optical gating (FROG).[5]

Measurement techniques edit

Several techniques are available to measure ultrashort optical pulses.

Intensity autocorrelation gives the pulse width when a particular pulse shape is assumed.

Spectral interferometry (SI) is a linear technique that can be used when a pre-characterized reference pulse is available. It gives the intensity and phase. The algorithm that extracts the intensity and phase from the SI signal is direct. Spectral phase interferometry for direct electric-field reconstruction (SPIDER) is a nonlinear self-referencing technique based on spectral shearing interferometry. The method is similar to SI, except that the reference pulse is a spectrally shifted replica of itself, allowing one to obtain the spectral intensity and phase of the probe pulse via a direct FFT filtering routine similar to SI, but which requires integration of the phase extracted from the interferogram to obtain the probe pulse phase.

Frequency-resolved optical gating (FROG) is a nonlinear technique that yields the intensity and phase of a pulse. It is a spectrally resolved autocorrelation. The algorithm that extracts the intensity and phase from a FROG trace is iterative. Grating-eliminated no-nonsense observation of ultrafast incident laser light e-fields (GRENOUILLE) is a simplified version of FROG. (Grenouille is French for "frog".)

Chirp scan is a technique similar to MIIPS which measures the spectral phase of a pulse by applying a ramp of quadratic spectral phases and measuring second harmonic spectra. With respect to MIIPS, which requires many iterations to measure the spectral phase, only two chirp scans are needed to retrieve both the amplitude and the phase of the pulse.[6]

Multiphoton intrapulse interference phase scan (MIIPS) is a method to characterize and manipulate the ultrashort pulse.

Wave packet propagation in nonisotropic media edit

To partially reiterate the discussion above, the slowly varying envelope approximation (SVEA) of the electric field of a wave with central wave vector   and central frequency   of the pulse, is given by:

 

We consider the propagation for the SVEA of the electric field in a homogeneous dispersive nonisotropic medium. Assuming the pulse is propagating in the direction of the z-axis, it can be shown that the envelope   for one of the most general of cases, namely a biaxial crystal, is governed by the PDE:[7]

 
 

where the coefficients contains diffraction and dispersion effects which have been determined analytically with computer algebra and verified numerically to within third order for both isotropic and non-isotropic media, valid in the near-field and far-field.   is the inverse of the group velocity projection. The term in   is the group velocity dispersion (GVD) or second-order dispersion; it increases the pulse duration and chirps the pulse as it propagates through the medium. The term in   is a third-order dispersion term that can further increase the pulse duration, even if   vanishes. The terms in   and   describe the walk-off of the pulse; the coefficient   is the ratio of the component of the group velocity   and the unit vector in the direction of propagation of the pulse (z-axis). The terms in   and   describe diffraction of the optical wave packet in the directions perpendicular to the axis of propagation. The terms in   and   containing mixed derivatives in time and space rotate the wave packet about the   and   axes, respectively, increase the temporal width of the wave packet (in addition to the increase due to the GVD), increase the dispersion in the   and   directions, respectively, and increase the chirp (in addition to that due to  ) when the latter and/or   and   are nonvanishing. The term   rotates the wave packet in the   plane. Oddly enough, because of previously incomplete expansions, this rotation of the pulse was not realized until the late 1990s but it has been experimentally confirmed.[8] To third order, the RHS of the above equation is found to have these additional terms for the uniaxial crystal case:[9]

 

The first and second terms are responsible for the curvature of the propagating front of the pulse. These terms, including the term in   are present in an isotropic medium and account for the spherical surface of a propagating front originating from a point source. The term   can be expressed in terms of the index of refraction, the frequency   and derivatives thereof and the term   also distorts the pulse but in a fashion that reverses the roles of   and   (see reference of Trippenbach, Scott and Band for details). So far, the treatment herein is linear, but nonlinear dispersive terms are ubiquitous to nature. Studies involving an additional nonlinear term   have shown that such terms have a profound effect on wave packet, including amongst other things, a self-steepening of the wave packet.[10] The non-linear aspects eventually lead to optical solitons.

Despite being rather common, the SVEA is not required to formulate a simple wave equation describing the propagation of optical pulses. In fact, as shown in,[11] even a very general form of the electromagnetic second order wave equation can be factorized into directional components, providing access to a single first order wave equation for the field itself, rather than an envelope. This requires only an assumption that the field evolution is slow on the scale of a wavelength, and does not restrict the bandwidth of the pulse at all—as demonstrated vividly by.[12]

High harmonics edit

High energy ultrashort pulses can be generated through high harmonic generation in a nonlinear medium. A high intensity ultrashort pulse will generate an array of harmonics in the medium; a particular harmonic of interest is then selected with a monochromator. This technique has been used to produce ultrashort pulses in the extreme ultraviolet and soft-X-ray regimes from near infrared Ti-sapphire laser pulses.

Applications edit

Advanced material 3D micro-/nano-processing edit

The ability of femtosecond lasers to efficiently fabricate complex structures and devices for a wide variety of applications has been extensively studied during the last decade. State-of-the-art laser processing techniques with ultrashort light pulses can be used to structure materials with a sub-micrometer resolution. Direct laser writing (DLW) of suitable photoresists and other transparent media can create intricate three-dimensional photonic crystals (PhC), micro-optical components, gratings, tissue engineering (TE) scaffolds and optical waveguides. Such structures are potentially useful for empowering next-generation applications in telecommunications and bioengineering that rely on the creation of increasingly sophisticated miniature parts. The precision, fabrication speed and versatility of ultrafast laser processing make it well placed to become a vital industrial tool for manufacturing. [13]

Micro-machining edit

Among the applications of femtosecond laser, the microtexturization of implant surfaces have been experimented for the enhancement of the bone formation around zirconia dental implants. The technique demonstrated to be precise with a very low thermal damage and with the reduction of the surface contaminants. Posterior animal studies demonstrated that the increase on the oxygen layer and the micro and nanofeatures created by the microtexturing with femtosecond laser resulted in higher rates of bone formation, higher bone density and improved mechanical stability.[14][15][16]

Multiphoton Polymerization edit

Multiphoton Polymerization (MPP) stands out for its ability to fabricate micro- and nano-scale structures with exceptional precision. This process leverages the concentrated power of femtosecond lasers to initiate highly controlled photopolymerization reactions, crafting detailed three-dimensional constructs.[17] These capabilities make MPP essential in creating complex geometries for biomedical applications, including tissue engineering and micro-device fabrication, highlighting the versatility and precision of ultrashort pulse lasers in advanced manufacturing processes.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1999". NobelPrize.org. Retrieved 18 October 2023.
  2. ^ "The Nobel Prize in Physics 2023". NobelPrize.org. Retrieved 18 October 2023.
  3. ^ Paschotta, Rüdiger. "Encyclopedia of Laser Physics and Technology - ultrashort pulses, femtosecond, laser". www.rp-photonics.com.
  4. ^ J. C. Diels, Femtosecond dye lasers, in Dye Laser Principles, F. J. Duarte and L. W. Hillman (Eds.) (Academic, New York, 1990) Chapter 3.
  5. ^ Comin, Alberto; Rhodes, Michelle; Ciesielski, Richard; Trebino, Rick; Hartschuh, Achim (2015). "Pulse Characterization in Ultrafast Microscopy: a Comparison of FROG, MIIPS and G-MIIPS". Cleo: 2015. pp. SW1H.5. doi:10.1364/CLEO_SI.2015.SW1H.5. ISBN 978-1-55752-968-8. S2CID 23655339.
  6. ^ Loriot, Vincent; Gitzinger, Gregory; Forget, Nicolas (2013). "Self-referenced characterization of femtosecond laser pulses by chirp scan". Optics Express. 21 (21): 24879–93. Bibcode:2013OExpr..2124879L. doi:10.1364/OE.21.024879. ISSN 1094-4087. PMID 24150331.
  7. ^ Band, Y. B.; Trippenbach, Marek (1996). "Optical Wave-Packet Propagation in Nonisotropic Media". Physical Review Letters. 76 (9): 1457–1460. Bibcode:1996PhRvL..76.1457B. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.76.1457. PMID 10061728.
  8. ^ Radzewicz, C.; Krasinski, J. S.; La Grone, M. J.; Trippenbach, M.; Band, Y. B. (1997). "Interferometric measurement of femtosecond wave-packet tilting in rutile crystal". Journal of the Optical Society of America B. 14 (2): 420. Bibcode:1997JOSAB..14..420R. doi:10.1364/JOSAB.14.000420.
  9. ^ Trippenbach, Marek; Scott, T. C.; Band, Y. B. (1997). "Near-field and far-field propagation of beams and pulses in dispersive media" (PDF). Optics Letters. 22 (9): 579–81. Bibcode:1997OptL...22..579T. doi:10.1364/OL.22.000579. PMID 18185596.
  10. ^ Trippenbach, Marek; Band, Y. B. (1997). "Dynamics of short-pulse splitting in dispersive nonlinear media". Physical Review A. 56 (5): 4242–4253. Bibcode:1997PhRvA..56.4242T. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.56.4242.
  11. ^ Kinsler, Paul (2010). "Optical pulse propagation with minimal approximations". Physical Review A. 81 (1): 013819. arXiv:0810.5689. Bibcode:2010PhRvA..81a3819K. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.81.013819. ISSN 1050-2947.
  12. ^ Genty, G.; Kinsler, P.; Kibler, B.; Dudley, J. M. (2007). "Nonlinear envelope equation modeling of sub-cycle dynamics and harmonic generation in nonlinear waveguides". Optics Express. 15 (9): 5382–7. Bibcode:2007OExpr..15.5382G. doi:10.1364/OE.15.005382. ISSN 1094-4087. PMID 19532792.
  13. ^ Malinauskas, Mangirdas; Žukauskas, Albertas; Hasegawa, Satoshi; Hayasaki, Yoshio; Mizeikis, Vygantas; Buividas, Ričardas; Juodkazis, Saulius (2016). "Ultrafast laser processing of materials: from science to industry". Light: Science & Applications. 5 (8): e16133. Bibcode:2016LSA.....5E6133M. doi:10.1038/lsa.2016.133. ISSN 2047-7538. PMC 5987357. PMID 30167182.
  14. ^ Delgado-Ruíz, R. A.; Calvo-Guirado, J. L.; Moreno, P.; Guardia, J.; Gomez-Moreno, G.; Mate-Sánchez, J. E.; Ramirez-Fernández, P.; Chiva, F. (2011). "Femtosecond laser microstructuring of zirconia dental implants". Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part B: Applied Biomaterials. 96B (1): 91–100. doi:10.1002/jbm.b.31743. ISSN 1552-4973. PMID 21061361.
  15. ^ Calvo Guirado et al, 2013 and 2014
  16. ^ Delgado-Ruiz et al, 2014)
  17. ^ "Multiphoton Polymerization". www.litilit.com. Retrieved 2024-04-02.

Further reading edit

  • Hirlimann, C. (2004). "Pulsed Optics". In Rullière, Claude (ed.). Femtosecond Laser Pulses: Principles and Experiments (2nd ed.). New York: Springer. ISBN 0-387-01769-0.
  • Andrew M. Weiner (2009). Ultrafast Optics. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley. ISBN 978-0-471-41539-8.
  • J. C. Diels and W. Rudolph (2006). Ultrashort Laser Pulse phenomena. New York, Academic. ISBN 978-0-12-215493-5.

External links edit

  • The virtual femtosecond laboratory Lab2
  • Animation on Short Pulse propagation in random medium (YouTube)
  • Ultrafast Lasers: An animated guide to the functioning of Ti:Sapphire lasers and amplifiers.

ultrashort, pulse, optics, ultrashort, pulse, also, known, ultrafast, event, electromagnetic, pulse, whose, time, duration, order, picosecond, second, less, such, pulses, have, broadband, optical, spectrum, created, mode, locked, oscillators, amplification, ul. In optics an ultrashort pulse also known as an ultrafast event is an electromagnetic pulse whose time duration is of the order of a picosecond 10 12 second or less Such pulses have a broadband optical spectrum and can be created by mode locked oscillators Amplification of ultrashort pulses almost always requires the technique of chirped pulse amplification in order to avoid damage to the gain medium of the amplifier They are characterized by a high peak intensity or more correctly irradiance that usually leads to nonlinear interactions in various materials including air These processes are studied in the field of nonlinear optics In the specialized literature ultrashort refers to the femtosecond fs and picosecond ps range although such pulses no longer hold the record for the shortest pulses artificially generated Indeed x ray pulses with durations on the attosecond time scale have been reported The 1999 Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded to Ahmed H Zewail for the use of ultrashort pulses to observe chemical reactions at the timescales on which they occur 1 opening up the field of femtochemistry A further Nobel prize the 2023 Nobel Prize in Physics was also awarded for ultrashort pulses This prize was awarded to Pierre Agostini Ferenc Krausz and Anne L Huillier for the development of attosecond pulses and their ability to probe electron dynamics 2 Contents 1 Definition 1 1 Background 2 Pulse shape control 3 Measurement techniques 4 Wave packet propagation in nonisotropic media 5 High harmonics 6 Applications 6 1 Advanced material 3D micro nano processing 6 2 Micro machining 6 3 Multiphoton Polymerization 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksDefinition edit nbsp A positively chirped ultrashort pulse of light in the time domain There is no standard definition of ultrashort pulse Usually the attribute ultrashort applies to pulses with a duration of a few tens of femtoseconds but in a larger sense any pulse which lasts less than a few picoseconds can be considered ultrashort The distinction between Ultrashort and Ultrafast is necessary as the speed at which the pulse propagates is a function of the index of refraction of the medium through which it travels whereas Ultrashort refers to the temporal width of the pulse wavepacket 3 A common example is a chirped Gaussian pulse a wave whose field amplitude follows a Gaussian envelope and whose instantaneous phase has a frequency sweep Background edit The real electric field corresponding to an ultrashort pulse is oscillating at an angular frequency w0 corresponding to the central wavelength of the pulse To facilitate calculations a complex field E t is defined Formally it is defined as the analytic signal corresponding to the real field The central angular frequency w0 is usually explicitly written in the complex field which may be separated as a temporal intensity function I t and a temporal phase function ps t E t I t e i w 0 t e i ps t displaystyle E t sqrt I t e i omega 0 t e i psi t nbsp The expression of the complex electric field in the frequency domain is obtained from the Fourier transform of E t E w F E t displaystyle E omega mathcal F E t nbsp Because of the presence of the e i w 0 t displaystyle e i omega 0 t nbsp term E w is centered around w0 and it is a common practice to refer to E w w0 by writing just E w which we will do in the rest of this article Just as in the time domain an intensity and a phase function can be defined in the frequency domain E w S w e i ϕ w displaystyle E omega sqrt S omega e i phi omega nbsp The quantity S w displaystyle S omega nbsp is the power spectral density or simply the spectrum of the pulse and ϕ w displaystyle phi omega nbsp is the phase spectral density or simply spectral phase Example of spectral phase functions include the case where ϕ w displaystyle phi omega nbsp is a constant in which case the pulse is called a bandwidth limited pulse or where ϕ w displaystyle phi omega nbsp is a quadratic function in which case the pulse is called a chirped pulse because of the presence of an instantaneous frequency sweep Such a chirp may be acquired as a pulse propagates through materials like glass and is due to their dispersion It results in a temporal broadening of the pulse The intensity functions temporal I t displaystyle I t nbsp and spectral S w displaystyle S omega nbsp determine the time duration and spectrum bandwidth of the pulse As stated by the uncertainty principle their product sometimes called the time bandwidth product has a lower bound This minimum value depends on the definition used for the duration and on the shape of the pulse For a given spectrum the minimum time bandwidth product and therefore the shortest pulse is obtained by a transform limited pulse i e for a constant spectral phase ϕ w displaystyle phi omega nbsp High values of the time bandwidth product on the other hand indicate a more complex pulse Pulse shape control editAlthough optical devices also used for continuous light like beam expanders and spatial filters may be used for ultrashort pulses several optical devices have been specifically designed for ultrashort pulses One of them is the pulse compressor 4 a device that can be used to control the spectral phase of ultrashort pulses It is composed of a sequence of prisms or gratings When properly adjusted it can alter the spectral phase f w of the input pulse so that the output pulse is a bandwidth limited pulse with the shortest possible duration A pulse shaper can be used to make more complicated alterations on both the phase and the amplitude of ultrashort pulses To accurately control the pulse a full characterization of the pulse spectral phase is a must in order to get certain pulse spectral phase such as transform limited Then a spatial light modulator can be used in the 4f plane to control the pulse Multiphoton intrapulse interference phase scan MIIPS is a technique based on this concept Through the phase scan of the spatial light modulator MIIPS can not only characterize but also manipulate the ultrashort pulse to get the needed pulse shape at target spot such as transform limited pulse for optimized peak power and other specific pulse shapes If the pulse shaper is fully calibrated this technique allows controlling the spectral phase of ultrashort pulses using a simple optical setup with no moving parts However the accuracy of MIIPS is somewhat limited with respect to other techniques such as frequency resolved optical gating FROG 5 Measurement techniques editSeveral techniques are available to measure ultrashort optical pulses Intensity autocorrelation gives the pulse width when a particular pulse shape is assumed Spectral interferometry SI is a linear technique that can be used when a pre characterized reference pulse is available It gives the intensity and phase The algorithm that extracts the intensity and phase from the SI signal is direct Spectral phase interferometry for direct electric field reconstruction SPIDER is a nonlinear self referencing technique based on spectral shearing interferometry The method is similar to SI except that the reference pulse is a spectrally shifted replica of itself allowing one to obtain the spectral intensity and phase of the probe pulse via a direct FFT filtering routine similar to SI but which requires integration of the phase extracted from the interferogram to obtain the probe pulse phase Frequency resolved optical gating FROG is a nonlinear technique that yields the intensity and phase of a pulse It is a spectrally resolved autocorrelation The algorithm that extracts the intensity and phase from a FROG trace is iterative Grating eliminated no nonsense observation of ultrafast incident laser light e fields GRENOUILLE is a simplified version of FROG Grenouille is French for frog Chirp scan is a technique similar to MIIPS which measures the spectral phase of a pulse by applying a ramp of quadratic spectral phases and measuring second harmonic spectra With respect to MIIPS which requires many iterations to measure the spectral phase only two chirp scans are needed to retrieve both the amplitude and the phase of the pulse 6 Multiphoton intrapulse interference phase scan MIIPS is a method to characterize and manipulate the ultrashort pulse Wave packet propagation in nonisotropic media editTo partially reiterate the discussion above the slowly varying envelope approximation SVEA of the electric field of a wave with central wave vector K 0 displaystyle textbf K 0 nbsp and central frequency w 0 displaystyle omega 0 nbsp of the pulse is given by E x t A x t exp i K 0 x i w 0 t displaystyle textbf E textbf x t textbf A textbf x t exp i textbf K 0 textbf x i omega 0 t nbsp We consider the propagation for the SVEA of the electric field in a homogeneous dispersive nonisotropic medium Assuming the pulse is propagating in the direction of the z axis it can be shown that the envelope A displaystyle textbf A nbsp for one of the most general of cases namely a biaxial crystal is governed by the PDE 7 A z b 1 A t i 2 b 2 2 A t 2 1 6 b 3 3 A t 3 g x A x g y A y displaystyle frac partial textbf A partial z beta 1 frac partial textbf A partial t frac i 2 beta 2 frac partial 2 textbf A partial t 2 frac 1 6 beta 3 frac partial 3 textbf A partial t 3 gamma x frac partial textbf A partial x gamma y frac partial textbf A partial y nbsp i g t x 2 A t x i g t y 2 A t y i 2 g x x 2 A x 2 i 2 g y y 2 A y 2 i g x y 2 A x y displaystyle i gamma tx frac partial 2 textbf A partial t partial x i gamma ty frac partial 2 textbf A partial t partial y frac i 2 gamma xx frac partial 2 textbf A partial x 2 frac i 2 gamma yy frac partial 2 textbf A partial y 2 i gamma xy frac partial 2 textbf A partial x partial y cdots nbsp dd where the coefficients contains diffraction and dispersion effects which have been determined analytically with computer algebra and verified numerically to within third order for both isotropic and non isotropic media valid in the near field and far field b 1 displaystyle beta 1 nbsp is the inverse of the group velocity projection The term in b 2 displaystyle beta 2 nbsp is the group velocity dispersion GVD or second order dispersion it increases the pulse duration and chirps the pulse as it propagates through the medium The term in b 3 displaystyle beta 3 nbsp is a third order dispersion term that can further increase the pulse duration even if b 2 displaystyle beta 2 nbsp vanishes The terms in g x displaystyle gamma x nbsp and g y displaystyle gamma y nbsp describe the walk off of the pulse the coefficient g x g y displaystyle gamma x gamma y nbsp is the ratio of the component of the group velocity x y displaystyle x y nbsp and the unit vector in the direction of propagation of the pulse z axis The terms in g x x displaystyle gamma xx nbsp and g y y displaystyle gamma yy nbsp describe diffraction of the optical wave packet in the directions perpendicular to the axis of propagation The terms in g t x displaystyle gamma tx nbsp and g t y displaystyle gamma ty nbsp containing mixed derivatives in time and space rotate the wave packet about the y displaystyle y nbsp and x displaystyle x nbsp axes respectively increase the temporal width of the wave packet in addition to the increase due to the GVD increase the dispersion in the x displaystyle x nbsp and y displaystyle y nbsp directions respectively and increase the chirp in addition to that due to b 2 displaystyle beta 2 nbsp when the latter and or g x x displaystyle gamma xx nbsp and g y y displaystyle gamma yy nbsp are nonvanishing The term g x y displaystyle gamma xy nbsp rotates the wave packet in the x y displaystyle x y nbsp plane Oddly enough because of previously incomplete expansions this rotation of the pulse was not realized until the late 1990s but it has been experimentally confirmed 8 To third order the RHS of the above equation is found to have these additional terms for the uniaxial crystal case 9 1 3 g t x x 3 A x 2 t 1 3 g t y y 3 A y 2 t 1 3 g t t x 3 A t 2 x displaystyle cdots frac 1 3 gamma txx frac partial 3 textbf A partial x 2 partial t frac 1 3 gamma tyy frac partial 3 textbf A partial y 2 partial t frac 1 3 gamma ttx frac partial 3 textbf A partial t 2 partial x cdots nbsp dd The first and second terms are responsible for the curvature of the propagating front of the pulse These terms including the term in b 3 displaystyle beta 3 nbsp are present in an isotropic medium and account for the spherical surface of a propagating front originating from a point source The term g t x x displaystyle gamma txx nbsp can be expressed in terms of the index of refraction the frequency w displaystyle omega nbsp and derivatives thereof and the term g t t x displaystyle gamma ttx nbsp also distorts the pulse but in a fashion that reverses the roles of t displaystyle t nbsp and x displaystyle x nbsp see reference of Trippenbach Scott and Band for details So far the treatment herein is linear but nonlinear dispersive terms are ubiquitous to nature Studies involving an additional nonlinear term g n l A 2 A displaystyle gamma nl A 2 A nbsp have shown that such terms have a profound effect on wave packet including amongst other things a self steepening of the wave packet 10 The non linear aspects eventually lead to optical solitons Despite being rather common the SVEA is not required to formulate a simple wave equation describing the propagation of optical pulses In fact as shown in 11 even a very general form of the electromagnetic second order wave equation can be factorized into directional components providing access to a single first order wave equation for the field itself rather than an envelope This requires only an assumption that the field evolution is slow on the scale of a wavelength and does not restrict the bandwidth of the pulse at all as demonstrated vividly by 12 High harmonics editHigh energy ultrashort pulses can be generated through high harmonic generation in a nonlinear medium A high intensity ultrashort pulse will generate an array of harmonics in the medium a particular harmonic of interest is then selected with a monochromator This technique has been used to produce ultrashort pulses in the extreme ultraviolet and soft X ray regimes from near infrared Ti sapphire laser pulses Applications editAdvanced material 3D micro nano processing edit The ability of femtosecond lasers to efficiently fabricate complex structures and devices for a wide variety of applications has been extensively studied during the last decade State of the art laser processing techniques with ultrashort light pulses can be used to structure materials with a sub micrometer resolution Direct laser writing DLW of suitable photoresists and other transparent media can create intricate three dimensional photonic crystals PhC micro optical components gratings tissue engineering TE scaffolds and optical waveguides Such structures are potentially useful for empowering next generation applications in telecommunications and bioengineering that rely on the creation of increasingly sophisticated miniature parts The precision fabrication speed and versatility of ultrafast laser processing make it well placed to become a vital industrial tool for manufacturing 13 Micro machining edit Among the applications of femtosecond laser the microtexturization of implant surfaces have been experimented for the enhancement of the bone formation around zirconia dental implants The technique demonstrated to be precise with a very low thermal damage and with the reduction of the surface contaminants Posterior animal studies demonstrated that the increase on the oxygen layer and the micro and nanofeatures created by the microtexturing with femtosecond laser resulted in higher rates of bone formation higher bone density and improved mechanical stability 14 15 16 Multiphoton Polymerization edit Multiphoton Polymerization MPP stands out for its ability to fabricate micro and nano scale structures with exceptional precision This process leverages the concentrated power of femtosecond lasers to initiate highly controlled photopolymerization reactions crafting detailed three dimensional constructs 17 These capabilities make MPP essential in creating complex geometries for biomedical applications including tissue engineering and micro device fabrication highlighting the versatility and precision of ultrashort pulse lasers in advanced manufacturing processes See also editAttosecond chronoscopy Bandwidth limited pulse Femtochemistry Frequency comb Medical imaging Ultrashort laser pulses are used in multiphoton fluorescence microscopes Optical communication Ultrashort pulses Filtering and Pulse Shaping Terahertz T rays generation and detection Ultrafast laser spectroscopy Wave packetReferences edit The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1999 NobelPrize org Retrieved 18 October 2023 The Nobel Prize in Physics 2023 NobelPrize org Retrieved 18 October 2023 Paschotta Rudiger Encyclopedia of Laser Physics and Technology ultrashort pulses femtosecond laser www rp photonics com J C Diels Femtosecond dye lasers in Dye Laser Principles F J Duarte and L W Hillman Eds Academic New York 1990 Chapter 3 Comin Alberto Rhodes Michelle Ciesielski Richard Trebino Rick Hartschuh Achim 2015 Pulse Characterization in Ultrafast Microscopy a Comparison of FROG MIIPS and G MIIPS Cleo 2015 pp SW1H 5 doi 10 1364 CLEO SI 2015 SW1H 5 ISBN 978 1 55752 968 8 S2CID 23655339 Loriot Vincent Gitzinger Gregory Forget Nicolas 2013 Self referenced characterization of femtosecond laser pulses by chirp scan Optics Express 21 21 24879 93 Bibcode 2013OExpr 2124879L doi 10 1364 OE 21 024879 ISSN 1094 4087 PMID 24150331 Band Y B Trippenbach Marek 1996 Optical Wave Packet Propagation in Nonisotropic Media Physical Review Letters 76 9 1457 1460 Bibcode 1996PhRvL 76 1457B doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 76 1457 PMID 10061728 Radzewicz C Krasinski J S La Grone M J Trippenbach M Band Y B 1997 Interferometric measurement of femtosecond wave packet tilting in rutile crystal Journal of the Optical Society of America B 14 2 420 Bibcode 1997JOSAB 14 420R doi 10 1364 JOSAB 14 000420 Trippenbach Marek Scott T C Band Y B 1997 Near field and far field propagation of beams and pulses in dispersive media PDF Optics Letters 22 9 579 81 Bibcode 1997OptL 22 579T doi 10 1364 OL 22 000579 PMID 18185596 Trippenbach Marek Band Y B 1997 Dynamics of short pulse splitting in dispersive nonlinear media Physical Review A 56 5 4242 4253 Bibcode 1997PhRvA 56 4242T doi 10 1103 PhysRevA 56 4242 Kinsler Paul 2010 Optical pulse propagation with minimal approximations Physical Review A 81 1 013819 arXiv 0810 5689 Bibcode 2010PhRvA 81a3819K doi 10 1103 PhysRevA 81 013819 ISSN 1050 2947 Genty G Kinsler P Kibler B Dudley J M 2007 Nonlinear envelope equation modeling of sub cycle dynamics and harmonic generation in nonlinear waveguides Optics Express 15 9 5382 7 Bibcode 2007OExpr 15 5382G doi 10 1364 OE 15 005382 ISSN 1094 4087 PMID 19532792 Malinauskas Mangirdas Zukauskas Albertas Hasegawa Satoshi Hayasaki Yoshio Mizeikis Vygantas Buividas Ricardas Juodkazis Saulius 2016 Ultrafast laser processing of materials from science to industry Light Science amp Applications 5 8 e16133 Bibcode 2016LSA 5E6133M doi 10 1038 lsa 2016 133 ISSN 2047 7538 PMC 5987357 PMID 30167182 Delgado Ruiz R A Calvo Guirado J L Moreno P Guardia J Gomez Moreno G Mate Sanchez J E Ramirez Fernandez P Chiva F 2011 Femtosecond laser microstructuring of zirconia dental implants Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part B Applied Biomaterials 96B 1 91 100 doi 10 1002 jbm b 31743 ISSN 1552 4973 PMID 21061361 Calvo Guirado et al 2013 and 2014 Delgado Ruiz et al 2014 Multiphoton Polymerization www litilit com Retrieved 2024 04 02 Further reading editThis further reading section may need cleanup Please read the editing guide and help improve the section October 2014 Learn how and when to remove this message Hirlimann C 2004 Pulsed Optics In Rulliere Claude ed Femtosecond Laser Pulses Principles and Experiments 2nd ed New York Springer ISBN 0 387 01769 0 Andrew M Weiner 2009 Ultrafast Optics Hoboken NJ Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 41539 8 J C Diels and W Rudolph 2006 Ultrashort Laser Pulse phenomena New York Academic ISBN 978 0 12 215493 5 External links editThe virtual femtosecond laboratory Lab2 Animation on Short Pulse propagation in random medium YouTube Ultrafast Lasers An animated guide to the functioning of Ti Sapphire lasers and amplifiers Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ultrashort pulse amp oldid 1218047263, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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