We generate 1.7-cycle and 35-µJ pulses at a 1-MHz repetition rate by using two-stage multiple plate continuum compression of Yb-laser pulses with 80-W average input power. By adjusting the plate positions with careful consideration of the thermal lensing effect due to the high average power, we compress the output pulse with a 184-fs initial duration to 5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe control of "flying" (or moving) spin qubits is an important functionality for the manipulation and exchange of quantum information between remote locations on a chip. Typically, gates based on electric or magnetic fields provide the necessary perturbation for their control either globally or at well-defined locations. Here, we demonstrate the dynamic control of moving electron spins via contactless gates that move together with the spins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA highly sensitive method for detecting transient reflection in the extreme ultraviolet (XUV) region was developed on the basis of high-order harmonics for tracking carrier and coherent phonon dynamics. The use of lock-in detection and boxcar integration enables us to observe optical modulation (ΔR/R) as high as 1 × 10, and the data acquisition takes only four minutes. XUV transient reflections of bismuth exhibited exponential decay originating from excited carriers and periodic oscillation originating from A optical phonons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigated the effect of an in-plane electric field on drifting spins in a GaAs quantum well. Kerr rotation images of the drifting spins revealed that the spin precession wavelength increases with increasing drift velocity regardless of the transport direction. A model developed for drifting spins with a heated electron distribution suggests that the in-plane electric field enhances the effective magnetic field component originating from the cubic Dresselhaus spin-orbit interaction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMost future information processing techniques using electron spins in non-magnetic semiconductors will require both the manipulation and transfer of spins without their coherence being lost. The spin-orbit effective magnetic field induced by drifting electrons enables us to rotate the electron spins in the absence of an external magnetic field. However, the fluctuations in the effective magnetic field originating from the random scattering of electrons also cause undesirable spin decoherence, which limits the length scale of the spin transport.
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