Extended X-ray absorption fine structure: Difference between revisions

From formulasearchengine
Jump to navigation Jump to search
en>SzMithrandir
mNo edit summary
No edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{More footnotes|date=April 2009}}
The writer is called Araceli Gulledge. I've always cherished residing in Idaho. What she loves performing is playing croquet and she is trying to make it a occupation. Bookkeeping is how he supports his family members and his salary has been really satisfying.<br><br>Also visit my weblog: auto warranty ([http://www.Kwakagames.com/profile/car43 visit the up coming internet page])
 
In [[optics]], an '''ultrashort pulse''' of light is an [[electromagnetic pulse]] whose time duration is of the order of a picosecond (10<sup>&minus;12</sup> second) or less. Such pulses have a broadband [[optical spectrum]], and can be created by [[modelocking|mode-locked]] oscillators. They are commonly referred to as ultrafast events. Amplification of ultrashort pulses almost always requires the technique of [[chirped pulse amplification]], in order to avoid damage to the gain medium of the amplifier.
 
They are characterized by a high peak [[Irradiance|intensity]] (or more correctly, [[irradiance]]) that usually leads to nonlinear interactions in various materials, including air. These processes are studied in the field of [[nonlinear optics]].
 
In the specialized literature, "ultrashort" refers to the [[femtosecond]] (fs) and [[picosecond]] (ps) range, although such pulses no longer hold the record for the shortest pulses artificially generated. Indeed, x-ray pulse durations on the [[attosecond]] time  scale have been reported.
 
The 1999 [[Nobel Prize in Chemistry]] was awarded to [[Ahmed H. Zewail]] for using ultrashort pulses to observe [[chemical reaction]]s on the timescales they occur on, opening up the field of [[femtochemistry]].
 
==Definition==
[[Image:Ultrashort pulse.svg|thumb|400px|right|An ultrashort pulse of light in the time domain.]]
An ultrashort pulse is a [[wave]] whose [[modulus|field amplitude]] follows a [[Gaussian function|Gaussian]] [[Envelope (waves)|envelope]] and whose [[instantaneous phase]] has a [[chirp|frequency sweep]].
 
===Background===
{{split section|Spectral phase|date=September 2013}}
The real electric field corresponding to an ultrashort pulse is oscillating at an angular frequency ''ω''<sub>0</sub> corresponding to the central wavelength of the pulse. To facilitate calculations, a complex field ''E''(''t'') is defined. Formally, it is defined as the [[analytic signal]] corresponding to the real field.
 
The central angular frequency ''ω''<sub>0</sub> is usually explicitly written in the complex field, which may be separated as a temporal intensity function ''I''(''t'') and a temporal phase function ''ψ''(''t''):
 
: <math>E(t) = \sqrt{I(t)}e^{i\omega_0t}e^{i\psi(t)}</math>
 
The expression of the complex electric field in the frequency domain is obtained from the [[Fourier transform]] of ''E''(''t''):
 
: <math>E(\omega) = \mathcal{F}(E(t))</math>
 
Because of the presence of the <math>e^{i\omega_0t}</math> term, ''E''(''ω'') is centered around ''ω''<sub>0</sub>, and it is a common practice to refer to ''E''(''ω''-''ω''<sub>0</sub>) by writing just ''E''(''ω''), which we will do in the rest of this article.
 
Just as in the time domain, an intensity and a phase function can be defined in the frequency domain:
 
: <math>E(\omega) = \sqrt{S(\omega)}e^{i\phi(\omega)}</math>
 
The quantity ''S''(''ω'') is the ''intensity spectral density'' (or simply, the ''spectrum'') of the pulse, and  ''φ''(''ω'') is the ''phase spectral density'' (or simply ''spectral phase''). Example of spectral phase functions include the case where ''φ''(''ω'') is a constant, in which case the pulse is called a [[bandwidth-limited pulse]], or where ''φ''(''ω'') is a quadratic function, in which case the pulse is called a [[chirp]]ed pulse because of the presence of an instantaneous frequency sweep.  Such a chirp may be acquired as a pulse propagates through materials (like glass) and is due to their [[Dispersion (optics)|dispersion]]. It results in a temporal broadening of the pulse.
 
The intensity functions—temporal ''I''(''t'') and spectral ''S''(''ω'') -- determine the time duration and spectrum bandwidth of the pulse. As stated by the [[uncertainty principle]], their product (sometimes called the time-bandwidth product) has a lower bound.  This minimum value depends on the definition used for the duration and on the shape of the pulse.  For a given spectrum, the minimum time-bandwidth product, and therefore the shortest pulse, is obtained by a transform-limited pulse, i.e., for a constant spectral phase ''φ''(''ω'').  High values of the time-bandwidth product, on the other hand, indicate a more complex pulse.
 
==Pulse shape control==
Although optical devices also used for continuous light, like beam expanders and spatial filters, may be used for ultrashort pulses, several optical devices have been specifically designed for ultrashort pulses. One of them is the [[prism compressor|pulse compressor]],<ref>J. C. Diels, Femtosecond dye lasers, in ''Dye Laser Principles'', [[F. J. Duarte]] and L. W. Hillman (Eds.) (Academic, New York, 1990) Chapter 3.</ref> a device that can be used to control the spectral phase of ultrashort pulses.  It is composed of a sequence of prisms, or gratings.  When properly adjusted it can alter the spectral phase ''φ''(''ω'') of the input pulse so that the output pulse is a [[bandwidth-limited pulse]] with the shortest possible duration. A [[femtosecond pulse shaping|pulse shaper]] can be used to make more complicated alterations on both the phase and the amplitude of ultrashort pulses.
 
To accurately control the pulse, a full characterization of the pulse spectral phase is a must in order to get certain pulse spectral phase (such as [[bandwidth-limited pulse|transform-limited]]). Then, a [[spatial light modulator]] can be used in the 4f plane to control the pulse. [[MIIPS|Multiphoton Intrapulse Interference Phase Scan]] (MIIPS) is a technique based on this concept. Through the phase scan of the spatial light modulator, MIIPS can not only characterize but also manipulate the ultrashort pulse to get the needed pulse shape at target spot (such as [[bandwidth-limited pulse|transform-limited pulse]] for optimized peak power, and other specific pulse shapes). This technique features with full calibration and control of the ultrashort pulse, with no moving parts, and simple optical setup.
 
==Measurement techniques==
 
Several techniques are available to measure ultrashort optical pulses:
 
* intensity [[optical autocorrelation|autocorrelation]]: gives the pulse width when a particular pulse shape is assumed.
 
* [[spectral interferometry]] (SI): a linear technique that can be used when a pre-characterized reference pulse is available.  Gives the intensity and phase. The algorithm that extracts the intensity and phase from the SI signal is direct.
 
* [[Spectral phase interferometry for direct electric-field reconstruction]] (SPIDER): a nonlinear self-referencing technique based on spectral shearing interferometry. The method is similar to SI, except that the reference pulse is a spectrally shifted replica of itself, allowing one to obtain the spectral intensity and phase of the probe pulse via a direct [[Fast Fourier transform|FFT]] filtering routine similar to SI, but which requires integration of the phase extracted from the interferogram to obtain the probe pulse phase.
 
* [[Frequency-resolved optical gating]] (FROG): a nonlinear technique that yields the intensity and phase of a pulse.  It's just a spectrally resolved autocorrelation.  The algorithm that extracts the intensity and phase from a FROG trace is iterative.
* [[Grating-eliminated no-nonsense observation of ultrafast incident laser light e-fields]] (GRENOUILLE), a simplified version of FROG. (''Grenouille'' is French for "[[frog]]".)
 
Methods of characterizing and controlling the ultrashort optical pulses:
* [[MIIPS]] Multiphoton Intrapulse Interference Phase Scan, a method to characterize and manipulate the ultrashort pulse.
 
== Wave packet propagation in nonisotropic media ==
 
To partially reiterate the discussion above, the [[slowly varying envelope approximation]] (SVEA) of the electric field of a wave with central wave vector <math> \textbf{K}_0 </math> and central frequency <math> \omega_0 </math> of the pulse, is given by:
:<math>
\textbf{E} ( \textbf{x} , t) = \textbf{ A } ( \textbf{x} , t) \exp ( i \textbf{K}_0 \textbf{x} - i \omega_0 t )
</math>
We consider the propagation for the SVEA of the electric field in a homogeneous dispersive nonistropic medium.  Assuming the pulse is propagating in the direction of the z-axis, it can be shown that the envelope <math> \textbf{A} </math> for one of the most general of cases, namely a biaxial crystal, is governed by the [[partial differential equation|PDE]]:<ref>M. Trippenbach,  and Y.B. Band, "Optical Wave-Packet Propagation in Nonisotropic Media", [[Physical Review Letters|Phys. Rev. Lett.]] 76 (1457) 1996. [http://prola.aps.org/abstract/PRL/v76/i9/p1457_1]</ref>
:<math>
\frac{\partial \textbf{A} }{\partial z }  =
~-~ \beta_1 \frac{\partial \textbf{A} }{\partial t}
~-~ \frac{i}{2} \beta_2 \frac{\partial^2 \textbf{A} }{\partial t^2}
~+~ \frac{1}{6} \beta_3 \frac{\partial^3 \textbf{A} }{\partial t^3}
~+~ \gamma_x \frac{\partial \textbf{A} }{\partial x}
~+~ \gamma_y \frac{\partial \textbf{A} }{\partial y}
</math>
::<math>
~~~~~~~~~~~
~+~ i \gamma_{tx} \frac{\partial^2 \textbf{A} }{\partial t \partial x}
~+~ i \gamma_{ty} \frac{\partial^2 \textbf{A} }{\partial t \partial y}
~-~ \frac{i}{2} \gamma_{xx} \frac{\partial^2 \textbf{A} }{ \partial x^2}
~-~ \frac{i}{2} \gamma_{yy} \frac{\partial^2 \textbf{A} }{ \partial y^2}
~+~ i \gamma_{xy}  \frac{\partial^2 \textbf{A} }{ \partial x \partial y} + \cdots
</math>
where the coefficients contains diffraction and dispersion effects which have been determined analytically with [[computer algebra]] and verified numerically to within third order for both isotropic and non-istropic media, valid in the near-field and far-field.
<math> \beta_1 </math> is the inverse of the group velocity projection. The term in <math> \beta_2 </math> is the group velocity [[Dispersion (optics)|dispersion]] (GVD) or second-order dispersion; it increases the pulse duration and chirps the pulse as it propagates through the medium.  The term in <math> \beta_3 </math> is a third-order dispersion term that can further increase the pulse duration, even if <math> \beta_2 </math> vanishes.  The terms in <math> \gamma_x </math> and <math> \gamma_y </math> describe the walk-off of the pulse; the coefficient <math> \gamma_x ~ (\gamma_y ) </math> is the ratio of the component of the group velocity <math> x ~ (y) </math> and the unit vector in the direction of propagation of the pulse (z-axis).  The terms in <math>\gamma_{xx}</math> and <math> \gamma_{yy} </math> describe diffraction of the optical wave packet in the directions perpendicular to the axis of propagation.  The terms in <math> \gamma_{tx} </math> and <math> \gamma_{ty} </math> containing mixed derivatives in time and space rotate the wave packet about the <math>y</math> and <math>x</math> axes, respectively, increase the temporal width of the wave packet (in addition to the increase due to the GVD), increase the dispersion in the <math>x</math> and <math>y</math> directions, respectively, and increase the chirp (in addition to that due to <math> \beta_2 </math>) when the latter and/or <math> \gamma_{xx} </math> and <math> \gamma_{yy} </math> are nonvanishing.  The term <math> \gamma_{xy} </math> rotates the wave packet in the <math> x-y </math> plane.  Oddly enough, because of previously incomplete expansions, this rotation of the pulse was not realized until the late 1990s but it has been ''experimentally'' confirmed.<ref>C. Radzewicz, J. S. Krasinski, M. J. laGrone, M. Trippenbach, and Y. B. Band, “Interferometric measurement of femtosecond wave-packet tilting in rutile crystal", [[Journal of the Optical Society of America B|J. Opt. Soc. Am. B]] 14 (420-424) 1997. [http://www.opticsinfobase.org/josab/viewmedia.cfm?uri=josab-14-2-420&seq=0]</ref> To third order, the RHS of the above equation is found to have these additional terms for the uniaxial crystal case:<ref>M. Trippenbach, T.C. Scott, and Y.B. Band, "Near-and Far Field Propagation of Beams and Pulses in Dispersive Media", [[Optics Letters|Opt. Lett.]] 22 (579) 1997. [http://www.opticsinfobase.org/ol/abstract.cfm?URI=ol-22-9-579] [http://www.bgu.ac.il/%7Eband/Tripp.OptLet22.579.97.pdf]</ref>
::<math>
\cdots
~+~ \frac{1}{3} \gamma_{t x x } \frac{\partial^3 \textbf{A} }{ \partial x^2 \partial t}
~+~ \frac{1}{3} \gamma_{t y y } \frac{\partial^3 \textbf{A} }{ \partial y^2 \partial t}
~+~ \frac{1}{3} \gamma_{t t x } \frac{\partial^3 \textbf{A} }{ \partial t^2 \partial x} + \cdots
</math>
The first and second terms are responsible for the curvature of the propagating front of the pulse.  These terms, including the term in <math>\beta_3</math> are present in an isotropic medium and account for the spherical surface of a propagating front originating from a point source. The term <math> \gamma_{txx} </math> can be expressed in terms of the index of refraction, the frequency <math> \omega </math> and derivatives thereof and the term <math> \gamma_{ttx} </math> also distorts the pulse but in a fashion that reverses the roles of <math> t </math> and <math> x </math> (see reference of Trippenbach, Scott and Band for details).
So far, the treatment herein is linear, but nonlinear dispersive terms are ubiquitous to nature.  Studies involving an additional nonlinear term <math> \gamma_{nl} |A|^2 A </math> have shown that such terms have a profound effect on wave packet, including amongst other things, a ''self-steepening'' of the wave packet.<ref>M. Trippenbach and Y.B. Band, "Dynamics of short-pulse splitting in dispersive nonlinear media", [[Physical Review|Phys. Rev. A]], 56 (4242) 1997. [http://prola.aps.org/abstract/PRA/v56/i5/p4242_1]</ref>  The non-linear aspects eventually lead to [[optical solitons]].
 
Despite being rather common, the SVEA is not required to formulate a simple wave equation describing the propagation of optical pulses.
In fact, as shown in,<ref name=kinsler2010>
{{cite journal
| author=Kinsler, P.
| year=2010
| title=Optical pulse propagation with minimal approximations
| journal=Phys. Rev. A
| volume=81
| pages=013819
| doi=10.1103/PhysRevA.81.013819
| arxiv=0810.5689
|bibcode = 2010PhRvA..81a3819K }}
</ref> even a very general form of the electromagnetic second order wave equation can be factorized into directional components, providing access to a single first order wave equation for the field itself, rather than an envelope. This requires only an assumption that the field evolution is slow on the scale of a wavelength, and does not restrict the bandwidth of the pulse at all—as demonstrated vividly by.<ref name=genty2007>
{{cite journal
| author=Genty, G.
| coauthors=Kinsler, P.; Kibler, B.; Dudley, J. M.
| year=2007
| title=Nonlinear envelope equation modeling of sub-cycle dynamics and carrier shocks and harmonic generation in highly nonlinear waveguides
| journal=Opt. Express
| volume=15
| pages=5382–5387
| doi=10.1364/OE.15.005382
| url=http://www.opticsexpress.org/abstract.cfm?id=132608
|bibcode = 2007OExpr..15.5382G }}
</ref>
 
==Applications==
* Micro-[[machining]]
* [[Femtochemistry]]
* [[Medical imaging]]: Ultrashort laser pulses are used in multiphoton [[fluorescence microscope]]s
* [[Medical Surgery]]:
* [[Terahertz]] (T-rays) generation and detection.
 
==See also==
* [[Frequency comb]]
* [[Bandwidth-limited pulse]]
 
==Notes==
<references/>
 
==References==
* {{cite book|first = C.|last = Hirlimann|year = 2004|title = Femtosecond Laser Pulses: Principles and Experiments|chapter=Pulsed Optics|editor = Rullière, Claude|edition = 2nd ed.| publisher = Springer | location = New York| isbn=0-387-01769-0}}
 
==Further reading==
{{cite book |title=Ultrafast Optics |author=Andrew M. Weiner |url=http://www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-0471415391.html |isbn=978-0-471-41539-8 |year=2009 |publisher=Hoboken, NJ: Wiley}}
 
{{cite book |title=Ultrashort Laser Pulse phenomena |author=J. C. Diels and W. Rudolph |isbn=978-0-12-215493-5 |year=2006 |publisher=New York, Academic}}
 
==External links==
* Multiphoton fluorescence microscopy [http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/techniques/fluorescence/multiphoton/multiphotonintro.html tutorial]
* Spectral interferometry (SI) [http://ultrafast.physics.ox.ac.uk/spider/res.html]
* The virtual femtosecond laboratory [http://www.lab2.de/ Lab2]
* [http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/electrical-engineering-and-computer-science/6-977-ultrafast-optics-spring-2005/lecture-notes/ Lecture notes] for Ultrafast Optics at [[MIT OpenCourseWare]]
* [http://jila.colorado.edu/content/studies-nonlinear-femtosecond-pulse-propagation-bulk-materials Studies of Nonlinear Femtosecond Pulse Propagation in Bulk Materials] with a chapter on ultrashort pulse measurement techniques, PhD thesis (by Hilary K. Eaton)
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qpDQ44F4Qks Animation on Short Pulse propagation in random medium (YouTube)]
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ultrashort Pulse}}
[[Category:Optics]]
[[Category:Nonlinear optics]]
[[Category:Laser science]]

Latest revision as of 23:56, 6 December 2014

The writer is called Araceli Gulledge. I've always cherished residing in Idaho. What she loves performing is playing croquet and she is trying to make it a occupation. Bookkeeping is how he supports his family members and his salary has been really satisfying.

Also visit my weblog: auto warranty (visit the up coming internet page)