We investigate a fundamental limitation occurring in vacuum ultraviolet and extreme ultraviolet seeded free electron lasers (FELs). For a given electron beam and undulator configuration, an increase of the FEL output energy at saturation can be obtained via an increase of the seed pulse duration. We put in evidence a complex spatiotemporal deformation of the amplified pulse, leading ultimately to a pulse splitting effect. Numerical studies of the Colson–Bonifacio FEL equations reveal that slippage length and seed laser pulse wings are core ingredients of the dynamics.
Influence of air-filling fraction on forward Raman-like scattering by
transversely trapped acoustic resonances in photonic crystal fibers
A. Brenn,
G. S. Wiederhecker,
M. S. Kang,
H. Hundertmark,
N. Joly,
P. St. J. Russell
JOURNAL OF THE OPTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA B-OPTICAL PHYSICS
26
(8)
1641-1648
(2009)
Raman-like forward scattering by acoustic phonons transversely trapped in birefringent silica-air photonic crystal fibers is studied. As the air-filling fraction increases, core-confined acoustic resonances become increasingly apparent at higher frequencies (> 1.1 GHz), while the number of cladding-confined acoustic modes involved in scattering falls. Two main types of scattering are observed: intramodal (scattering to new frequencies within the same optical mode) and intermodal (frequency-shifted scattering to a different optical mode). It is shown that the twofold symmetric microstructure in a birefringent fiber causes strongly polarization-dependent intramodal scattering. Good agreement is obtained between the experimental measurements and numerical solutions of both the acoustic and electromagnetic wave equations by using a full-vectorial finite-element approach. Phononic bandgaps are found to play a significant role at higher air-filling fractions, leading to the appearance of additional bands in the scattering spectrum. (C) 2009 Optical Society of America
Kontakt
Forschungsgruppe Nicolas Joly
Professur für Photonik Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg
und
Max-Planck-Institut für die Physik des Lichts Staudtstr. 2 91058 Erlangen, Germany