High-brightness sources of coherent and few-cycle-duration light waveforms with spectral coverage from the ultraviolet to the terahertz would offer unprecedented versatility and opportunities for a wide range of applications from bio-chemical sensing1 to time-resolved and nonlinear spectroscopy, and to attosecond light-wave electronics. Combinations of various sources with frequency conversion and supercontinuum generation can provide relatively large spectral coverage, but many applications require a much broader spectral range and low-jitter synchronization for time-domain measurements. Here, we present a carrier-envelope-phase (CEP)-stable light source, seeded by a mid-infrared frequency comb, with simultaneous spectral coverage across seven optical octaves, from the ultraviolet (340 nm) into the terahertz (40,000 nm). Combining soliton self-compression and dispersive wave generation in an anti-resonant-reflection photonic-crystal fibre with intra-pulse difference frequency generation in BaGa2GeSe6, the spectral brightness is two to five orders of magnitude above that of synchrotron sources. This will enable high-dynamic-range spectroscopies and provide numerous opportunities in attosecond physics and material sciences.
Three-photon head-mounted microscope for imaging deep cortical layers in freely moving rats
Alexandr Klioutchnikov,
Damian James Wallace,
Michael H. Frosz,
Richard Zeltner,
Jürgen Sawinski,
Verena Pawlak,
Kay-Michael Voit,
Philip St. J. Russell,
Jason Kerr
We designed a head-mounted three-photon microscope for imaging deep cortical layer neuronal activity in a freely moving rat. Delivery of high-energy excitation pulses at 1,320 nm required both a hollow-core fiber whose transmission properties did not change with fiber movement and dispersion compensation. These developments enabled imaging at >1.1 mm below the cortical surface and stable imaging of layer 5 euronal activity for >1 h in freely moving rats performing a range of behaviors.
Bragg Reflection and Conversion Between Helical Bloch Modes in Chiral Three-Core Photonic Crystal Fiber
Sébastien Loranger,
Yang Chen,
Paul Roth,
Michael Frosz,
Gordon Wong,
Philip Russell
Journal of Lightwave Technology
38
(15)
4100-4107
(2020)
| Journal
Optical fiber modes carrying orbital angular momentum (OAM) have many applications, for example in mode-division-multiplexing for optical communications. The natural guided modes of N-fold rotationally symmetric optical fibers, such as most photonic crystal fibers, are helical Bloch modes (HBMs). HBMs consist of a superposition of azimuthal harmonics (order m) of order l_A(m)=l_A(0)+mN. When such fibers are twisted, these modes become circularly and azimuthally birefringent, that is to say HBMs with equal and opposite values of l_A(0) and spin s are non-degenerate. In this article we report the use of Bragg mirrors to reflect and convert HBMs in a twisted three-core photonic crystal fiber, and show that by writing a tilted fiber Bragg grating (FBG), reflection between HBMs of different orders becomes possible, with high wavelength-selectivity. We measure the near-field phase and amplitude distribution of the reflected HBMs interferometrically, and demonstrate good agreement with theory. This new type of FBG has potential applications in fiber lasers, sensing, quantum optics, and in any situation where creation, conversion, and reflection of OAM-carrying modes is required.
Progress toward third-order parametric down-conversion in optical fibers
A. Cavanna,
J. Hammer,
C. Okoth,
E. Ortiz-Ricardo,
H. Cruz-Ramirez,
K. Garay-Palmett,
A. B. U’Ren,
M. Frosz,
X. Jiang, et al.
Optical fibers have been considered an optimal platform for third-order parametric down-conversion since they can potentially overcome the weak third-order nonlinearity by their long interaction length. Here we present, in the first part, a theoretical derivation for the conversion rate both in the case of spontaneous generation and in the presence of a seed beam. Then we review three types of optical fibers and we examine their properties in terms of conversion efficiency and practical feasibility.
Robust excitation and Raman conversion of guided vortices in a chiral gas-filled photonic crystal fiber
Sona Davtyan,
Yang Chen,
Michael Frosz,
Philip Russell,
David Novoa
The unique ring-shaped intensity patterns and helical phase fronts of optical vortices make them useful in many applications. Here we report for the first time, to the best of our knowledge, efficient Raman frequency conversion between vortex modes in a twisted hydrogen-filled single-ring hollow core photonic crystal fiber (SR-PCF). High-fidelity transmission of optical vortices in an untwisted SR-PCF becomes<br>more and more difficult as the orbital angular momentum (OAM) order increases, due to scattering at structural imperfections in the fiber microstructure. In a helically twisted<br>SR-PCF, however, the degeneracy between left- and righthanded versions of the same mode is lifted, with the result<br>that they are topologically protected from such scattering. With launch efficiencies of ∼75%, a high damage threshold and broadband guidance, these fibers are ideal for performing nonlinear experiments that require the polarization<br>state and azimuthal order of the interacting modes to be preserved over long distances. Vortex coherence waves of internal molecular motion carrying angular momentum are excited in the gas, permitting the polarization and OAM of the Raman bands to be tailored, even in spectral regions where conventional solid-core waveguides are opaque or susceptible to optical damage.
Contact
TDSU Fibre Fabrication & Glass Studio Michael Frosz
Max Planck Institute for the Science of Light Staudtstr. 2 91058 Erlangen, Germany