Spectral phase interferometry for direct electric-field reconstruction
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In ultrafast optics, spectral phase interferometry for direct electric-field reconstruction (SPIDER) is an ultrashort pulse measurement technique.
The basics
SPIDER is an interferometric ultrashort pulse measurement technique in the frequency domain based on spectral shearing interferometry. Spectral shearing interferometry is similar in concept to intensity autocorrelation except that, instead of gating a pulse with a time-shifted copy of itself, a pulse is interfered with a frequency-shifted or spectrally sheared copy of itself. Because even the fastest detectors are unable to resolve ultrashort laser pulses, SPIDER uses nonlinear mixing as a combination of filters to generate a signal that can be measured by a slow detector.Implementation
There are two important specifications for filters: time/frequency response and amplitude/phase response. A filter is said to be time or frequency stationary if its output is unaffected by the time or frequency of the input. A filter can also be classified as amplitude-only or phase-only depending on its response to the amplitude or phase of the input. Because a time stationary filter and a frequency stationary filter can be combined to make a linear filter with any arbitrary response, both are a necessary and sufficient requirement for the measurement of the electric field of an input pulse.
In a basic spectral shearing interferometer, the input beam is split into two identical pulses, sending one through a linear spectral phase modulator:
- [ \tilde_l^P(\omega,\tau)=\exp(j\tau\omega) ]
- [ N_l^P(t,\Omega)=\exp(-j\Omega t) ]
- [ \tilde^A(\omega-\omega_c)=\exp \left [frac right ] ]
In this setup, the pulse through the temporal phase arm has its spectrum shifted by a spectral shear of Ω. In order to exactly measure a pulse, the field must be sampled by a certain number of spectrally sheared components. This sampling requirement is determined by the Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem. If the function has compact support on the interval τN, then it is completely determined by giving its values at a series of frequencies 2π/τN apart. This means that the spectral shear that needs to be generated by the SPIDER is Ω = 2π/τN.
The pulse through the spectral arm acquires a time-delay of τ. The recombination of the pulses from the two arms is then resolved by the spectrometer which produces a signal
- [S(\omega_c;\Omega,\tau) = \int \left \^A(\omega-\omega_c) \cdot \left [ int N_l^P(omega'-omega) tilde(omega)domega' + tilde_l^P(omega) tilde(omega) right ] \right \}^2 d\omega ]
- [S(\omega_c) = \left \(\omega_c - \Omega) \right |^2 + \left | \tilde(\omega_c) \right |^2 + 2 \left | \tilde(\omega_c-\Omega)\tilde(\omega_c) \right |\cos \left [ phi_(omega_c-Omega)-phi_(omega_c)-tauomega_c right ] \right \} ]
The shearing interferogram created by this signal generally consists of fringes spaced at a frequency of 2π/τ. Deviations from the nominal fringe spacing can be analyzed to obtain the spectral phase of the field. The spectral amplitude must be obtained by a separate measurement of the pulse spectrum.
References
I. A. Walmsley and V. Wong, "Characterization of the electric field of ultrashort optical pulses," J. Opt. Soc. Am. B 13(11), p. 2453-2463 (1996).C. Iaconis and I. A. Walmsley, "Self-Referencing Spectral Interferometry for Measuring Ultrashort Optical Pulses," IEEE J. Quantum Electron. 35(4), p. 501-509 (1999).
C. Iaconis and I. A. Walmsley, "Spectral phase interferometry for direct electric-field reconstruction of ultrashort optical pulses," Opt. Lett. 23(10), p. 792-794 (1998).
Competing techniques
- Frequency-resolved optical gating
- Streak camera - not a significant competitor. Streak cameras have picosecond response times.
External link
- [SPIDER page by Ian Walmsley] (the inventor of SPIDER)
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