Türkçe

A new method for generating controllable optical pulse pairs using a single fiber laser

462
2024-01-15 14:10:02
Çeviriyi gör

Researchers from Bayreuth University and Konstanz University are developing new methods to control ultra short laser emission using soliton physics and two pulse combs in a single laser. This method has the potential to greatly accelerate and simplify laser applications.

Traditionally, the pulse interval of lasers is set by dividing each pulse into two pulses and delaying them at different, mechanically adjustable distances. Alternatively, a laser source with slightly different orbital periods ("double comb") can be used to generate rapid travel delay from the superposition of two pulse combs.

Professor Georg Herink, the head of the ultrafast dynamics research team for Experimental Physics VIII at Bayreuth University, and his doctoral students Julia A. Lang, along with Professor Alfred Leinstorfer and Dr. Sarah R. Hutter from the University of Constance, have collaborated to demonstrate a pure optical method based on two pulse combs in a single laser. It can achieve extremely fast and flexible adjustable pulse sequences. Meanwhile, this can be achieved in very compact, glass fiber based light sources. By temporarily merging the two pulse combs outside the laser, researchers have obtained a pulse mode that can be set with any delay as needed.

Schematic diagram of dual comb fiber laser oscillator, external pulse combination, and real-time detection.

The researchers used a technique: instead of the usual single light pulse, two pulses are cycled in the laser. The first author of the study, Lang, explained, "There is enough time between two pulses to apply a single" interference "using the fast optical switch inside the laser. Using the knowledge of laser physics, this" intracavity modulation "can cause changes in pulse velocity, causing the two pulses to offset each other in time." The laser source based on glass fiber is manufactured by Hutter and Leitenstorfer from the University of Konstanz.

Thanks to special real-time measurement methods, researchers at Bayreuth University can now accurately observe how short light pulses (called solitons) move when subjected to external influences. This real-time spectral interferometry technology can accurately measure the distance between each pair of pulses - over 10 million times per second. Herink explained, "We have demonstrated that we can adjust time extremely quickly on a large scale and achieve freely programmable forms of motion.". They proposed an innovative method for controlling solitons, which not only provides new insights into soliton physics, but also opens up possibilities for the particularly fast and efficient application of ultra short laser pulses. The research findings have been published in the journal Science Advances.

Source: Laser Manufacturing Network

İlgili öneriler
  • HENGTONG listed on the Fortune Global 500 list of brands

    Recently, the 2024 (21st) World Brand 500 ranking list exclusively compiled by World Brand Lab was released in New York, USA. HENGTONG brand participated in the selection for the first time, standing out from more than 8000 participating brands in 32 countries worldwide and ranking 395th on the "Top 500 World Brands" list. This year, there are a total of 21 new brands on the global list, of whic...

    2024-12-17
    Çeviriyi gör
  • Credo launches the world's first 800G DSP for linear receiving optical devices, targeting ultra large scale and artificial intelligence data centers

    Credo Technology Group Holding Ltd announced today the launch of the industry's first Dove 800 850G digital signal processor IC, which has been optimized for linear receiving optical devices and is also known as semi retiming linear optical devices in the industry. In LRO transceivers or active optical cables, only the transmission path from the electrical input to the output of the optical path i...

    2023-11-30
    Çeviriyi gör
  • Researchers have created the first organic semiconductor laser that can be operated without the need for a separate light source

    Researchers at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland have manufactured the first organic semiconductor laser to operate without the need for a separate light source - which has proven to be extremely challenging. The new all electric driven laser is more compact than previous devices and operates in the visible light region of the electromagnetic spectrum. Therefore, its developers stated that...

    2023-11-15
    Çeviriyi gör
  • The United States promotes the development of next-generation EUV lithography technology

    LLNL has long been a pioneer in the development of EUV lithography technology.A laboratory located in California will lay the foundation for the next development of extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography technology. The project is led by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) and aims to promote the next development of EUV lithography technology, centered around the laboratory's developed dr...

    01-06
    Çeviriyi gör
  • The world's highest power industrial grade fiber laser is released in Tianjin

    On August 31st, Tianjin Kaipulin Optoelectronics Technology Co., Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as Kaipulin), a Tianjin Port Free Trade Zone enterprise, officially released the world's first 200000 watt ultra-high power industrial grade fiber laser, breaking the record for the highest power of industrial grade fiber lasers in the world and marking China's stable position in the international advanc...

    2024-09-02
    Çeviriyi gör