Affiliation:
1. Huazhong University of Science and Technology
2. University of Ottawa and National Research Council Canada
Abstract
Accompanied by the rapid development of ultrafast laser platforms in
recent decades, the spatiotemporal manipulation of ultrashort laser
pulses has attracted much attention due to the potential for
cutting-edge applications of structured light, including optical
tweezers, optical communications, super-resolution imaging,
time-resolved spectroscopy in molecules and quantum materials, and
strong-field physics. Today, techniques capable of characterizing the
full spatial, temporal, and polarization state properties of
structured light are strongly desired. Here, we demonstrate a
technique, termed 3D TIPTOE, for characterizing structured
mid-infrared waveforms, which uses only a two-dimensional
silicon-based image sensor as both the detector and the nonlinear
medium. By combining the advantages of the sub-cycle time resolution
afforded by nonlinear excitation and the spatial resolution inherent
to the two-dimensional sensor, the 3D TIPTOE technique allows full
characterization of structured electric fields, significantly reducing
the complexity of detection compared to other techniques. The validity
of the technique is established by measuring both few-cycle
Bessel–Gaussian pulses and radially polarized femtosecond vector
beams.
Funder
Air Force Office of Scientific
Research
Basic Energy Sciences
Fusion Energy Sciences
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research
Council of Canada
Defense Threat Reduction
Agency
National Natural Science Foundation of
China
Cited by
1 articles.
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