Optical parametric amplification (OPA) is a powerful tool for the generation of ultrashort light pulses. However, under certain circumstances, it develops spatio-spectral couplings, color dependent aberrations that degrade the pulse properties. In this work, we present a spatio-spectral coupling generated by a non-collimated pump beam and resulting in the change of direction of the amplified signal with respect to the input seed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Fourier-transform limit achieved by a linear spectral phase is the typical optimum by the generation of ultrashort light pulses. It provides the highest possible intensity, however, not the shortest full width at half maximum of the pulse duration, which is relevant for many experiments. The approach for achieving shorter pulses than the original Fourier limit is termed temporal superresolution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOptical parametric chirped-pulse amplification (OPCPA) is a light amplification technique that provides the combination of broad spectral gain bandwidth and large energy, directly supporting few-cycle pulses with multi-terawatt (TW) peak powers. Saturation in an OPCPA increases the stability and conversion efficiency of the system. However, distinct spectral components experience different gain and do not saturate under the same conditions, which reduces performance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTemporal-intensity contrast is crucial in intense laser-matter interaction to circumvent the undesirable expansion of steep high-density plasma prior to the interaction with the main pulse. Nonlinear elliptical polarization rotation in an argon filled hollow-core fiber is used here for cleaning pedestals/satellite pulses of a chirped-pulse-amplifier based Ti:Sapphire laser. This source provides ∼35 energy and sub-4-fs duration, and the process has >50 internal efficiency, more than the most commonly used pulse cleaning methods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigate the temporal contrast of the Light Wave Synthesizer 20 (LWS-20): a powerful, few-cycle source based on the optical parametric synthesizer principle. Saturation effects in the RF amplifier driving the acousto-optic programmable dispersive filter (AOPDF) were found to degrade the coherent contrast for non-monotonic group delay corrections. We subsequently present a new dispersion scheme and design a novel transmission grism-based stretcher optimized for LWS-20.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF