Ultrafast nano-focusing with full optical waveform control
Samuel Berweger, Joanna M. Atkin, Xiaoji X. Xu, Robert L. Olmon, and, Markus B. Raschke

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a method for ultrafast, nanometer-scale optical focusing with full control over the waveform, enabling advanced nanoscale spectroscopy and quantum control applications.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach combining broadband SPP coupling and spectral pulse shaping to achieve femtosecond nano-focusing with arbitrary waveform control.
Findings
Achieved 20 nm spatial and 16 fs temporal confinement of light at the tip apex.
Demonstrated wavelength and phase independent 3D focusing mechanism.
Enabled generation of arbitrary optical waveforms at the nanoscale.
Abstract
The spatial confinement and temporal control of an optical excitation on nanometer length scales and femtosecond time scales has been a long-standing challenge in optics. It would provide spectroscopic access to the elementary optical excitations in matter on their natural length and time scales and enable applications from ultrafast nano-opto-electronics to single molecule quantum coherent control. Previous approaches have largely focused on using surface plasmon polariton (SPP) resonant nanostructures or SPP waveguides to generate nanometer localized excitations. However, these implementations generally suffer from mode mismatch between the far-field propagating light and the near-field confinement. In addition, the spatial localization in itself may depend on the spectral phase and amplitude of the driving laser pulse thus limiting the degrees of freedom available to independently…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
