Raman-enhanced spectral compression of high-energy femtosecond laser pulses in molecular gases
Zegui Wang, Yi-Hao Chen, Yunlong Mo, Zaitian Dong, Wanhong Yin, Frank Wise, Wei Cao

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel high-energy spectral compression method using nonlinear propagation in gas-filled capillaries, leveraging Raman response to achieve significant spectral narrowing of femtosecond laser pulses.
Contribution
It demonstrates the first spectral compression in gas-filled waveguides, utilizing Raman effects to improve pulse fidelity at high energies.
Findings
Spectral width reduced by up to a factor of 12
Effective compression achieved with pulses as high as 1 mJ
Raman response enhances compression fidelity in molecular gases
Abstract
Nonlinear pulse propagation in gas-filled waveguides has attracted substantial attention over the past decade, and a variety of capabilities have been reported. However, there is no prior report of spectral compression in gas-filled waveguides or cavities, which would offer a natural route for scaling to much higher pulse energies than have been reached in solid structures. Here we report a high-energy spectral-compression technique based on nonlinear propagation in gas-filled capillaries. With 0.1- to 1-mJ pulses, compression of the spectral width by a factor up to 12 (from 60 nm to 5 nm) is demonstrated. Key to this advance is recognition that the process plays out differently in gases than in solids. In a noble gas (Ar), we find that even small structure in the spectrum, which is mapped to the time profile, of the input pulse can degrade the compression process. We identify the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLaser-Matter Interactions and Applications · Laser Material Processing Techniques · Combustion and flame dynamics
