Ultrashort Laser Pulses I
Ultrashort Laser Pulses I
Description of pulses
X (t ) ∝ 1
2 I (t ) exp{i [ω0t − φ (t )]} + c.c.
Intensity Phase
Carrier
frequency
E (t ) ∝ I (t ) exp{−iφ (t )}
Time [fs]
This removes the rapidly varying part of the pulse electric field and
yields a complex quantity, which is actually easier to calculate with.
E (t ) = E0 exp −(t / τ HW 1/ e ) 2
= E0 exp −2 ln 2 (t / τ FWHM ) 2
= E0 exp −1.38(t / τ FWHM ) 2
I (t ) ∝ E0 exp −4 ln 2 (t / τ FWHM ) 2
2
The intensity is:
The phase
of this pulse
is constant,
φ(t) = 0,
and is not
plotted
here.
The phase:
Im[ E (t )] E(ti)
φ (t ) = − arctan Im
Re[ E (t )]
−φ(ti)
Equivalently,
Re
φ(t) = − Im{ln[E(t)]}
The Fourier Transform
To think about ultrashort laser pulses, the Fourier Transform
is essential.
∞
X% (ω ) = ∫ X (t ) exp(−iω t ) dt
−∞
1 ∞
X (t ) = ∫ X% (ω ) exp(iω t ) dω
2π −∞
X (t ) = 1
2 I (t ) exp{i [ω0t − φ (t )]} + c.c.
yields: Note that φ and ϕ are different!
X% (ω ) = 1
2 S (ω − ω0 ) exp{−i [ϕ (ω − ω0 )]} +
1
2 S (−ω − ω0 ) exp{+i [ϕ (−ω − ω0 )]}
Note that these two terms
are not complex
The frequency-domain electric field has conjugates of each other
positive- and negative-frequency components. because the FT integral is
the same for each!
The complex frequency-domain pulse
field
Since the negative-frequency component contains the same infor-
mation as the positive-frequency component, we usually neglect it.
X% (ω ) ≡ S (ω ) exp{−i ϕ (ω )}
E% (ω ) X% (ω )
S (ω ) = X (ω )
2
%
Im[X% (ω )]
ϕ (ω ) = − arctan
Re[X (ω )]
%
or
ϕ (ω ) = − Im {ln[X% (ω )]}
Intensity and phase of a Gaussian
The Gaussian is real, so its phase is zero.
Time domain:
A Gaussian
transforms
to a Gaussian Spectrum and Spectral Phase
Frequency domain:
Time-shifted
Gaussian pulse
(with a flat phase):
All of these
ω1 frequencies have
zero phase. So
ω2 this pulse has:
ϕ(ω) = 0
ω3
Note that this
wave-form sees
ω4 constructive
interference, and
ω5 hence peaks, at
t = 0.
ω6 And it has
cancellation
0 t everywhere else.
Now try a linear spectral phase: ϕ(ω) = aω.
By the Shift Theorem, a linear spectral phase is just a delay in time.
And this is what occurs!
ϕ(ω1) = 0
ϕ(ω2) = 0.2 π
ϕ(ω3) = 0.4 π
ϕ(ω4) = 0.6 π
ϕ(ω5) = 0.8 π
ϕ(ω6) = π
t
Transforming between wavelength and
frequency
The spectrum and spectral phase vs. frequency differ from
the spectrum and spectral phase vs. wavelength.
2π c
ω=
The spectral phase is
ϕ λ (λ ) = ϕ ω (2π c / λ ) λ
easily transformed:
To transform the spectrum, note that the energy is the same, whether
we integrate the spectrum over frequency or wavelength:
∞ ∞
∫−∞
S λ (λ ) d λ =
∫
−∞
Sω (ω ) dω
∞
−∞
−2π c 2π c
Changing
variables:
=
∫∞
Sω (2π c / λ )
λ 2
dλ = ∫ −∞
Sω (2π c / λ )
λ 2 dλ
d ω −2π c 2π c
= ⇒ S λ ( λ ) = Sω (2π c / λ )
dλ λ2 λ2
The spectrum and spectral phase vs.
wavelength and frequency
Example: A Gaussian spectrum with a linear spectral phase vs.
frequency
−1
In wavelength: δ (1/ λ ) = δλ ⇒ δλ = λ 2 δ (1/ λ )
λ2
Assuming an δλ = (800 nm)(.8 ×10−4 cm)(17 cm −1 )
800-nm
wavelength: or: δλ = 1 nm
The Instantaneous frequency
The temporal phase, φ(t), contains frequency-vs.-time information.
The pulse instantaneous angular frequency, ωinst(t), is defined as:
dφ
ωinst (t ) ≡ ω 0 −
dt
This is easy to see. At some time, t, consider the total phase of the
wave. Call this quantity φ0:
φ0 = ω 0t − φ (t )
Exactly one period, T, later, the total phase will (by definition) increase
to φ0 + 2π:
φ0 + 2π = ω0 ⋅ [t + T ] − φ (t + T )
where φ(t+T) is the slowly varying phase at the time, t+T. Subtracting
these two equations:
2π = ω 0T − [φ (t + T ) − φ (t )]
Instantaneous frequency (cont’d)
Dividing by T and recognizing that 2π/T is a frequency, call it ωinst(t):
So we’re done!
So we can define the group delay vs. frequency, tgr(ω), given by:
tgr(ω) = dϕ / dω
Also, we’ll typically use this result, which is a real time (the rad’s
cancel out), and never dϕ/dν, which isn’t.
The only problem with phase-blanking is that you have to decide the
intensity level below which the phase is meaningless.
Phase Taylor Series expansions
We can write a Taylor series for the phase, φ(t), about the time t = 0:
t t2
φ (t ) = φ0 + φ1 + φ2 + ...
1! 2!
where
dφ
φ1 = is related to the instantaneous frequency.
dt t =0
where only the first few terms are typically required to describe well-
behaved pulses. Of course, we’ll consider badly behaved pulses,
which have higher-order terms in φ(t).
Expanding the phase in time is not common because it’s hard to
measure the intensity vs. time, so we’d have to expand it, too.
Frequency-domain phase expansion
It’s more common to write a Taylor series for ϕ(ω):
( ω − ω0 )
2
ω − ω0
ϕ (ω ) = ϕ 0 + ϕ1 + ϕ2 + ...
1! 2!
where
dϕ
ϕ1 = is the group delay!
dω ω = ω0
d 2ϕ
ϕ2 = is called the group-delay dispersion.
dω 2 ω =ω0
As in the time domain, only the first few terms are typically required to
describe well-behaved pulses. Of course, we’ll consider badly behaved
pulses, which have higher-order terms in ϕ(ω).
Zeroth-order phase: the absolute phase
The absolute phase is the same in both the time and frequency
domains.
f (t)exp(iφ0 ) ⊃ F( ω )exp(iφ0 )
An absolute phase of π/2 will turn a cosine carrier wave into a sine.
It’s usually irrelevant, unless the pulse is only a cycle or so long.
Notice that the two four-cycle pulses look alike, but the three single-
cycle pulses are all quite different.
First-order phase in frequency: a shift in time
By the Fourier-transform Shift Theorem, f (t − ϕ1 ) ⊃ F (ω )exp(i ωϕ1 )
ϕ1 = 0
ϕ1 = − 20 fs
Note that ϕ1 does not affect the instantaneous frequency, but the
group delay = ϕ1.
First-order phase in time: a frequency shift
By the Inverse-Fourier-transform Shift Theorem,
F (ω − φ1 ) ⊂ f (t ) exp(−i φ1 t )
φ1 = 0 / fs
φ1 = −.07 / fs
Note that φ1 does not affect the group delay, but it does affect the
instantaneous frequency = –φ1.
Second-order phase: the linearly chirped pulse
This pulse increases its frequency linearly in time (from red to blue).
Note that for β > 0, when t < 0, the two terms partially cancel,
so the phase changes slowly with time (so the frequency is low).
And when t > 0, the terms add, and the phase changes more rapidly
(so the frequency is larger).
The instantaneous frequency
vs. time for a chirped pulse
where:
φ (t ) = − β t 2
ωinst (t ) = ω 0 + 2 β t = ω 0 − 2 β t