RESUMO
Performance of the novel high repetition rate HF-PW laser system of ELI ALPS is presented in its first operation phase at 400 TW and 700 TW levels. Long-term operation was tested at 2.5 and 10â Hz repetition rates, where an exceptional 0.66% and 1.08% shot-to-shot energy stability was demonstrated, respectively. Thorough spatio-spectral and temporal measurements confirmed high quality output pulses with a Strehl ratio of >0.9 after compression at both repetition rates. Amplified pulses with an unprecedentedly high 240 W average power were reached for the first time from a PW-class amplifier chain by using novel pseudo-active mirror disk amplification-based pump lasers.
RESUMO
Recompressed pulses from Ti:sapphire chirped-pulse lasers are accompanied by a slowly decaying post-pulse pedestal that is coherent with the main pulse. The pedestal typically consists of numerous pulses with temporal separation in the picosecond range. The source of this artifact lies in the Ti:sapphire active medium itself, both in the Kerr-lens mode-locked oscillator and in subsequent amplifiers. In the presence of substantial self-phase modulation, after recompression the post-pedestal generates a mirror-symmetric pre-pulse pedestal. This pedestal severely degrades the leading edge of the output pulse. This degradation is far more limiting than the original post-pedestal and severely lowers the achievable temporal contrast.
RESUMO
Nonlinear elliptical polarization rotation is used to improve the contrast of femtosecond pulses by several orders of magnitude. Using nonlinear induced birefringence in air, we produced cleaned pulses with an energy of a few hundreds of microjoules. This technique presents several major advantages, such as convenience and stability of the setup. We investigated the phase profile required for obtaining high-energy pulses. No phase distortion is observed, and the spatial quality of the beam is preserved.