RESUMO
We report on a novel combined laser pulse shaping and dynamic wavelength encoding capability based on a simple architecture implementing direct space to time mapping. There are several potential applications that can be enabled by the ability to control the instantaneous intensity or wavelength of an optical waveform on a picosecond-to-nanosecond timescale. To our knowledge, no known methods can access this temporal regime with a practical architecture. Here, we demonstrate an extension of the Space-Time Induced Linearly Encoded Transcription for Temporal Optimization (STILETTO) technique that can generate optical waveforms with a programmable instantaneous wavelength vs. time. We experimentally demonstrate the technique by generating self-gated spectrograms and show that it can encode dynamic wavelength vs time profiles at timescales not achievable by any other known method.
RESUMO
We demonstrate a novel, to the best of our knowledge, extension of optical arbitrary waveform generation capable of picosecond resolution over nanosecond duration. The method, called space-time induced linearly encoded transcription for temporal optimization, is based on direct space-to-time pulse shaping and is extended here to single-mode output with a programmable temporal profile. We develop the theory of operation and discuss ultimate limits on resolution, record length, and efficiency. We report on the results of an experimental demonstration showing â¼1ps resolution over 600 ps.
RESUMO
Multi-GeV electron beams with energy up to 4.2 GeV, 6% rms energy spread, 6 pC charge, and 0.3 mrad rms divergence have been produced from a 9-cm-long capillary discharge waveguide with a plasma density of ≈7×10¹7 cm⻳, powered by laser pulses with peak power up to 0.3 PW. Preformed plasma waveguides allow the use of lower laser power compared to unguided plasma structures to achieve the same electron beam energy. A detailed comparison between experiment and simulation indicates the sensitivity in this regime of the guiding and acceleration in the plasma structure to input intensity, density, and near-field laser mode profile.