Controlling quantum interference between virtual and dipole two-photon optical excitation pathways using phase-shaped laser pulses
Jurick Lahiri, Stephen H. Yuwono, Ilias Magoulas, Mehdi Moemeni, Babak, Borhan, G. J. Blanchard, Piotr Piecuch, Marcos Dantus

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates control over quantum interference between virtual and dipole two-photon excitation pathways using phase-shaped laser pulses, leading to enhanced fluorescence signals in a photochemical system.
Contribution
It introduces a method to manipulate quantum interference in two-photon excitation with phase-shaped femtosecond laser pulses, achieving significant fluorescence enhancement.
Findings
Achieved up to 1.75-fold increase in fluorescence
Experimental results agree with simulations of pathway responses
Potential applications in microscopy and spectroscopic techniques
Abstract
Two-photon excitation (TPE) proceeds via a "virtual" pathway, which depends on the accessibility of one or more intermediate states, and, in the case of non-centrosymmetric molecules, an additional "dipole" pathway involving the off-resonance dipole-allowed one-photon transitions and the change in the permanent dipole moment between the initial and final states. Here, we control the quantum interference between these two optical excitation pathways by using phase-shaped femtosecond laser pulses. We find enhancements by a factor of up to 1.75 in the two-photon-excited fluorescence of the photobase FR0-SB in methanol after taking into account the longer pulse duration of the shaped laser pulses. Simulations taking into account the different responses of the virtual and dipole pathways to external fields and the effect of pulse shaping on two-photon transitions are found to be in good…
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