Spatiooral coherence mapping of few-cycle vortex pulses

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Date
2014
Volume
4
Issue
Journal
Series Titel
Book Title
Publisher
London : Nature Publishing Group
Link to publishers version
Abstract

Light carrying an orbital angular momentum (OAM) displays an optical phase front rotating in space and time and a vanishing intensity, a so-called vortex, in the center. Beyond continuous-wave vortex beams, optical pulses with a finite OAM are important for many areas of science and technology, ranging from the selective manipulation and excitation of matter to telecommunications. Generation of vortex pulses with a duration of few optical cycles requires new methods for characterising their coherence properties in space and time. Here we report a novel approach for flexibly shaping and characterising few-cycle vortex pulses of tunable topological charge with two sequentially arranged spatial light modulators. The reconfigurable optical arrangement combines interferometry, wavefront sensing, time-of-flight and nonlinear correlation techniques in a very compact setup, providing complete spatiooral coherence maps at minimum pulse distortions. Sub-7â €...fs pulses carrying different optical angular momenta are generated in single and multichannel geometries and characterised in comparison to zero-order Laguerre-Gaussian beams. To the best of our knowledge, this represents the shortest pulse durations reported for direct vortex shaping and detection with spatial light modulators. This access to space-time coupling effects with sub-femtosecond time resolution opens new prospects for tailored twisted light transients of extremely short duration.

Description
Keywords
OAM, vortex, pulse
Citation
Grunwald, R., Elsaesser, T., & Bock, M. (2014). Spatiooral coherence mapping of few-cycle vortex pulses. 4. https://doi.org//10.1038/srep07148
Collections
License
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 Unported