A tutorial on THz pulse analysis: accurate retrieval of pulse arrival times, spectral energy density and absolute spectral phase
James Lloyd-Hughes, Nishtha Chopra, Justas Deveikis, Raj Pandya and, Jack Woolley

TL;DR
This paper reviews Fourier analysis techniques for THz pulse measurement, introduces a phenomenological model for pulse reproduction, and presents methods for accurate spectral phase and timing retrieval in time-domain spectroscopy.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive tutorial on THz pulse analysis, emphasizing best practices in Fourier analysis and introducing a model for diverse pulse types.
Findings
Validated a phenomenological model for THz pulses
Demonstrated accurate spectral phase retrieval methods
Compared spectral energy densities across sources
Abstract
Electro-optic sampling allows the electric field of THz, mid-infrared and visible light pulses to be measured directly as a function of time, with data analysis often performed in the frequency domain after fast Fourier transform. Here we review aspects of Fourier theory relevant to the frequency-domain analysis of light pulses recorded in the time-domain. We describe a ``best practise'' approach to using the discrete Fourier transform that ensures consistency with analytical results from the continuous Fourier transform. We summarise a phenomenological time-domain model of THz pulses, based on carrier and envelope waves, and show that it can reproduce a wide variety of experimental single- to multi-cycle THz pulses, with exemplary data from lab-based sources (photoconductive antennae, optical rectification, spintronic emitters) and a THz free electron laser. A quantitative comparison…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsTerahertz technology and applications · Gyrotron and Vacuum Electronics Research · Photonic and Optical Devices
