This study presents a novel way to increase the energy conversion efficiency of optical parametric amplification by eliminating the idler wave from the interaction using consecutive type-I and type-II amplification processes. By using the aforementioned straightforward approach the wavelength tunable narrow-bandwidth amplification with exceptionally high 40% peak pump-to-signal conversion efficiency and 68% peak pump depletion was achieved in the short-pulse regime, while preserving the beam quality factor of less than 1.4.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHistone deacetylases (HDACs) play an essential role in the transcriptional regulation of cells through the deacetylation of nuclear histone and non-histone proteins and are promising therapeutic targets for the treatment of various diseases. Here, the synthesis of new compounds in which a hydroxamic acid residue is attached to differently substituted pyrimidine rings via a methylene group bridge of varying length as potential HDAC inhibitors is described. The target compounds were obtained by alkylation of 2-(alkylthio)pyrimidin-4(3)-ones with ethyl 2-bromoethanoate, ethyl 4-bromobutanoate, or methyl 6-bromohexanoate followed by aminolysis of the obtained esters with hydroxylamine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUsually the absorption of interacting waves is detrimental to the parametric amplification process. We show that even in the case of large idler wave absorption it is possible to get highly efficient signal amplification as well as amplifier bandwidth enhancement due to back-conversion suppression. We numerically investigated the influence of the idler wave linear losses arising in the case of parametric amplification in 515 nm pumped BBO crystal tuned to signal amplification at 610 nm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAutomatically operating particle detection devices generate valuable data, but their use in routine aerobiology needs to be harmonized. The growing network of researchers using automatic pollen detectors has the challenge to develop new data processing systems, best suited for identification of pollen or spore from bioaerosol data obtained near-real-time. It is challenging to recognise all the particles in the atmospheric bioaerosol due to their diversity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReactive astrogliosis is a response to injury in the central nervous system that plays an essential role in inflammation and tissue repair. It is characterized by hypertrophy of astrocytes, alterations in astrocyte gene expression and astrocyte proliferation. Reactive astrogliosis occurs in multiple neuropathologies, including stroke, traumatic brain injury and Alzheimer's disease, and it has been proposed as a possible source of the changes in diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) metrics observed with these diseases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe experimentally study filamentation and supercontinuum generation in a birefringent medium [beta-barium borate (β-BBO) crystal] pumped by intense 90 fs, 1.8 μm laser pulses whose carrier wavelength falls in the range of anomalous group velocity dispersion of the crystal. We demonstrate that the competition between the intrinsic cubic and cascaded-quadratic nonlinearities may serve as a useful tool for controlling the self-action effects via phase matching condition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on the generation of ultrabroadband supercontinuum (SC) by filamentation of two optical-cycle, carrier-envelope phase-stable pulses at 2 μm in fused silica, sapphire, CaF₂ and YAG. The SC spectra extend from 450 nm to more than 2500 nm, and their particular shapes depend on dispersive properties of the materials. Prior to spectral super-broadening, we observe third-harmonic generation, which occurs in the condition of large phase and group velocity mismatch and consists of free and driven components.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this paper we illustrate how the localization of the stationary two-dimensional solution of the propagation equation strongly depends on the features of its spatio-temporal spectral bandwidth. We especially investigate the role of the ultra-broad temporal support and of the spatial bandwidth of the spectrum on the high localization in one spatial dimension of "Bessel-like" or "blade-like" beams, quasi-stationarily propagating in normally dispersive materials, and potentially interesting for microfabrication applications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe experimentally study the statistics of the white-light continuum generated by focusing of 130 fs, 800 nm pulses in a sapphire plate and show that the statistical distributions of the spectral intensity of the blue-shifted continuum components obey the extreme-value statistics. This rogue-wave-like behavior is detected only within a narrow input-pulse energy interval. By the use of numerical simulations, we show that the observed rogue-wave-like behavior is associated with pulse splitting and build-up of intense trailing pulse.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigated the intensity-dependent loss properties of nonlinear crystals by using subpicosecond laser pulses at 264 and 211 nm. Two-photon absorption coefficients for potassium dihydrogen phosphate, beta-barium borate, and lithium triborate crystals were obtained from the intensity-dependent transmission measurements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigh-energy light pulses that are tunable from 1.1 to 2.6 mum, with a duration as short as 14.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe show that, in the case of sum-frequency mixing, one can alleviate group-velocity mismatch between IR and UV pulses by choosing different pulse widths, thus extending the interaction length of ultrashort pulses within nonlinear crystals. By fifth-harmonic generation with a Nd:glass laser, we demonstrate efficient frequency upconversion of 195-fs 264-nm pulses under the envelope of 0.9-ps 1055-nm pulses in beta-barium borate crystal, yielding <270-fs pulses with energy of up to 110muJ at 211 nm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe predict that the combination of space and time modulational instabilities that occur by means of parametric wave mixing in quadratic media leads to colored conical emission. This phenomenon should be observed under conditions usually employed in second-harmonic experiments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on highly efficient four-wave optical parametric amplification in a water cell pumped by an elliptically shaped, ultrashort pulsed laser beam under non-collinear phase-matching configuration. Energy conversion from pump to parametric waves as high as 25 % is obtained owing to the achievement of 1-dimensional spatial-soliton regime, which guarantees high intensity over a large interaction length and ensures high beam quality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on the experimental observations of on-axis spectral broadening arising from self-focusing of the axicon-generated femtosecond Bessel beam in water. The observed spectral broadening is interpreted by a nonlinearly phase-matched four-wave mixing process involving the intense conical pump, the axial signal and a conical idler wave.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe predict that in traveling-wave degenerate parametric downconversion the Bessel beam pump stimulates the appearance of a nondiffracting X-wave from quantum noise amplification. Numerical simulation results of downconversion in ADP crystal are presented, along with preliminary experimental data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
December 2004
In optical second-harmonic generation with normal dispersion, the virtually infinite bandwidth of the unbounded, hyperbolic, modulational instability leads to quenching of spatial multisoliton formation and to the occurrence of a catastrophic spatiotemporal breakup when an extended beam is left to interact with an extremely weak external noise with a coherence time much shorter than that of the pump.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
February 2004
The spatiotemporal intensity profile of a 100-fs wave packet at the output of a X2 crystal, tuned for mismatched second-harmonic generation, is probed via sum-frequency generation with a compressed, 20-fs pulse, revealing the appearance of an X-type wave shape.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigate experimentally the competition between spatial and temporal breakup due to modulational instability in chi((2)) nonlinear mixing. The modulation of the wave packets caused by the energy exchange between fundamental and second-harmonic components is found to be the prevailing trigger mechanism which, according to the relative weight of diffraction and dispersion, leads to the appearance of a multisoliton pattern in the low-dimensional spatial or temporal domain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn chi(2) three-wave mixing, the noise-seeded spatiotemporal modulational instability has a dramatic impact on the spatial soliton formation and on their stability, leading to the occurrence of a temporal breakup on the 20 fs scale and to the counterintuitive observation of spatial solitons with no apparent participation of the high-frequency field in the self-trapping.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe observe the formation of an intense optical wave packet fully localized in all dimensions, i.e., both longitudinally (in time) and in the transverse plane, with an extension of a few tens of fsec and microns, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
August 2003
X waves, spatiotemporal generalization of the monochromatic Bessel- (or Durnin-) type beams, are known in linear acoustic, microwave and optics for their unique property of defeating both spatial and temporal spreadings. Recently, we brought to the attention that X-type waves are also the key to understand the spatiotemporal dynamics observed in the nonlinear (high intensity) regime. Indeed, X waves represent the normal-propagation mode for a wide class of parametric interactions described by hyperbolic nonlinear models featuring spatial self-focusing and temporal self-broadening.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
July 2003
We study Bessel X waves with cone dispersion propagating in free space and dispersive media. Their propagation features find simple explanation when viewed as cylindrically symmetric versions of the so-called tilted pulses. All previously reported cases of suppression of normal material group velocity dispersion by using angular dispersion in tilted pulses, pulsed Bessel beams, and Bessel X waves are compared and presented in a unified way.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNonlinear optical media that are normally dispersive support a new type of localized (nondiffractive and nondispersive) wave packets that are X shaped in space and time and have slower than exponential decay. High-intensity X waves, unlike linear ones, can be formed spontaneously through a trigger mechanism of conical emission, thus playing an important role in experiments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on the generation of stable dark-vortex solitons in large-phase-mismatched second-harmonic generation of self-defocusing type, sustained by a combined effect of transverse walk-off and finite beam size.
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