Spectral Phase Interferometry For Direct Electric-field Reconstruction
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In
ultrafast optics In optics, an ultrashort pulse, also known as an ultrafast event, is an electromagnetic pulse whose time duration is of the order of a picosecond (10−12 second) or less. Such pulses have a broadband optical spectrum, and can be created by ...
, spectral phase interferometry for direct electric-field reconstruction (SPIDER) is an
ultrashort pulse In optics, an ultrashort pulse, also known as an ultrafast event, is an electromagnetic pulse whose time duration is of the order of a picosecond (10−12 second) or less. Such pulses have a broadband optical spectrum, and can be created by ...
measurement technique originally developed by Chris Iaconis and
Ian Walmsley Ian Alexander Walmsley is Provost of Imperial College London where he is also Chair of Experimental Physics. He was previously pro-vice-chancellor for research and Hooke Professor of Experimental Physics at the University of Oxford, and a prof ...
.


The basics

SPIDER is an interferometric ultrashort pulse measurement technique in the frequency domain based on spectral shearing
interferometry Interferometry is a technique which uses the ''interference (wave propagation), interference'' of Superposition principle, superimposed waves to extract information. Interferometry typically uses electromagnetic waves and is an important inves ...
. Spectral shearing interferometry is similar in concept to lateral shearing interferometry, except the shearing is performed in the frequency domain. The spectral shear is typically generated by sum-frequency mixing the test pulse with two different quasi-monochromatic frequencies (usually derived by
chirp A chirp is a signal in which the frequency increases (''up-chirp'') or decreases (''down-chirp'') with time. In some sources, the term ''chirp'' is used interchangeably with sweep signal. It is commonly applied to sonar, radar, and laser syste ...
ing a copy of the pulse itself), although it can also be achieved by spectral filtering or even with linear electro-optic modulators for picosecond pulses. The interference between the two upconverted pulses allows the
spectral phase In signal processing, the power spectrum S_(f) of a continuous time signal x(t) describes the distribution of power into frequency components f composing that signal. According to Fourier analysis, any physical signal can be decomposed into a ...
at one frequency to be referenced to the spectral phase at a different frequency, separated by the spectral shear - the difference in frequency of the two monochromatic beams. In order to extract the phase information, a carrier fringe pattern is introduced, typically by delaying the two spectrally sheared copies with respect to one another.


Theory

The intensity of the interference pattern from two time-delayed spectrally sheared pulses can be written as :\beginS(\omega) &= , E(\omega) + E(\omega-\Omega)e^, ^2\\ &= I(\omega) + I(\omega-\Omega) + 2\sqrt\cos phi(\omega)-\phi(\omega-\Omega)-\omega\tauend, where E(\omega) is the analytic signal representing the unknown (upconverted) field being measured, \Omega is the spectral shear, \tau is the time delay, I(\omega) = , E(\omega), ^2 is the spectral intensity and \phi(\omega) is the spectral phase. For a sufficiently large delay (from 10 to 1000 times the ''Fourier transform limited'' TLpulse duration), the interference of the two time-delayed fields results in a cosine modulation with a nominal spacing of \delta\omega\sim 2\pi/\tau; and any dispersion of the pulse results in minor deviations in the nominal fringe spacing. Effectively it is these deviations in the nominal phase spacing that yield the dispersion of the test pulse . The unknown spectral phase of the pulse can be extracted using a simple, direct algebraic algorithm first described by Takeda. The first step involves Fourier transforming the interferogram into the pseudo time domain: :\begin\widetilde(\widetilde) &= \mathfrak (\omega)\ &= \widetilde^(\widetilde) + \widetilde^(\widetilde-\tau) + \widetilde^(\widetilde+\tau)\end, where \widetilde^(\widetilde) = \mathfrak (\omega) + I(\omega-\Omega)/math> is a 'direct current' (dc) term centred at \widetilde with a width inversely proportional to the spectral bandwidth, and \widetilde^(\widetilde\mp\tau) = \mathfrak\ are two 'alternating current' (ac) sidebands resulting from the interference of the two fields. The dc term contains information about the spectral intensity only, whereas the ac sidebands contain information about the spectral intensity and phase of the pulse (since the ac sidebands are Hermitian conjugates of each other, they contain the same information). One of the ac sidebands is filtered out and inverse Fourier transformed back into the frequency domain, where the interferometric spectral phase can be extracted: :\beginD(\omega, \Omega) &= \mathfrak^ widetilde^(\widetilde-\tau)\ &= \sqrte^e^\end. The final exponential term, resulting from the delay between the two interfering fields, can be obtained and removed from a calibration trace, which is achieved by interfering two unsheared pulses with the same time delay (this is typically performed by measuring the interference pattern of the two fundamental pulses which have the same time-delay as the upconverted pulses). This enables the SPIDER phase to be extracted simply by taking the argument of the calibrated interferometric term: :\begin\theta(\omega) &= \angle _\text(\omega)D^\ast(\omega,\Omega)\ &= \phi(\omega-\Omega) - \phi(\omega)\end. There are several methods to reconstruct the spectral phase from the SPIDER phase, the simplest, most intuitive and commonly used method is to note that the above equation looks similar to a finite difference of the spectral phase (for small shears) and thus can be integrated using the trapezium rule: :\phi(\omega_N - \Omega/2) \approxeq -\sum_^N\frac theta(\omega_n)+\theta(\omega_)/math>. This method is exact for reconstructing group delay dispersion (GDD) and third order dispersion (TOD); the accuracy for higher order dispersion depends on the shear: smaller shear results in higher accuracy. An alternative method us via concatenation of the SPIDER phase: :\begin\phi(\omega_0 + N, \Omega, ) &= \begin -\sum^N_ \theta(\omega_0 + n\Omega) &\text\, \Omega>0\\ \sum^_ \theta(\omega_0 + n, \Omega, ) &\text\, \Omega<0 \end\end for integer N and concatenation grid \ = \. Note that in the absence of any noise, this would provide an exact reproduction of the spectral phase at the sampled frequencies. However, if D(\omega) falls to a sufficiently low value at some point on the concatenation grid, then the extracted phase difference at that point is undefined and the relative phase between adjacent spectral points is lost. The spectral intensity can be found via a quadratic equation using the intensity of the dc and ac terms (filtered independently via a similar method above) or more commonly from an independent measurement (typically the intensity of the dc term from the calibration trace), since this provides the best signal to noise and no distortion from the upconversion process (e.g. spectral filtering from the phase matching function of a 'thick' crystal).


Alternative techniques

Spatially encoded arrangement for SPIDER (SEA-SPIDER) is a variant of SPIDER. The spectral phase of an ultrashort laser pulse is encoded into a spatial fringe pattern rather than a spectral fringe pattern. Other techniques are
frequency-resolved optical gating Frequency-resolved optical gating (FROG) is a general method for measuring the Spectral density, spectral phase of Ultrashort pulse, ultrashort laser pulses, which range from subfemtosecond to about a nanosecond in length. Invented in 1991 by Rick ...
,
streak camera A streak camera is an instrument for measuring the variation in a pulse of light's intensity with time. They are used to measure the pulse duration of some ultrafast laser systems and for applications such as time-resolved spectroscopy and LIDAR ...
with picosecond response times, and
multiphoton intrapulse interference phase scan Multiphoton intrapulse interference phase scan (MIIPS) is a method used in ultrashort laser technology that simultaneously measures (phase characterization), and compensates (phase correction) femtosecond laser pulses using an adaptive pulse shap ...
(MIIPS), a method to characterize and manipulate the ultrashort pulse. Micro-SPIDER is an implementation of SPIDER in which the spectral shear required for a SPIDER measurement is generated in a thick nonlinear crystal with a carefully engineered
phase-matching Nonlinear optics (NLO) is the branch of optics that describes the behaviour of light in nonlinear media, that is, media in which the polarization density P responds non-linearly to the electric field E of the light. The non-linearity is typically ...
function.


See also

*
Spectroscopy Spectroscopy is the field of study that measures and interprets electromagnetic spectra. In narrower contexts, spectroscopy is the precise study of color as generalized from visible light to all bands of the electromagnetic spectrum. Spectro ...


References


Further reading

* * * *{{Citation , last1= Walmsley , first1= I. A. , last2= Wong , first2= V. , date= 1996 , title= Characterization of the Electric Field of Ultrashort Optical Pulses , journal= J. Opt. Soc. Am. B , volume=13 , issue=11 , pages=2453–2463 , doi= 10.1364/JOSAB.13.002453 , bibcode = 1996JOSAB..13.2453W


External links


new SPIDER page
includes links to example code Interferometry Nonlinear optics Optical metrology Laser science