TL;DR
This paper introduces an on-chip optoelectronic device capable of sampling weak optical fields with attosecond resolution under ambient conditions, enabling advanced time-domain spectroscopy and analysis of ultrafast phenomena.
Contribution
The development of a compact, low-energy, on-chip sampling device using resonant nanoantennas for petahertz-speed electric field measurements in the visible to near-infrared range.
Findings
Successfully sampled a 5 fJ broadband near-infrared pulse.
Achieved petahertz-level switching speeds with nanoantenna-based electron emission.
Demonstrated in situ recovery of optical transient and plasmonic dynamics.
Abstract
Time-domain sampling of arbitrary electric fields with sub-cycle resolution enables a complete time-frequency analysis of a system's response to electromagnetic illumination. This provides access to dynamic information that is not provided by absorption spectra alone, and has recently been shown through measurements in the infrared that time-domain optical-field sampling offers significant improvements with regard to molecular sensitivity and limits of detection compared to traditional spectroscopic methods. Despite the many scientific and technological motivations, time-domain, optical-field sampling systems operating in the visible to near-infrared spectral regions are seldom accessible, requiring large driving pulse energies, and large laser amplifier systems, bulky apparatuses, and vacuum environments. Here, we demonstrate an all-on-chip, optoelectronic device capable of sampling…
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