Title :
Carrier envelope phase control of monocycle THz pulses using an artificial dispersive medium
Author :
Nagai, Masaharu ; Matsubara, Eiichi ; Minowa, Yosuke ; Ashida, M.
Author_Institution :
Grad. Sch. of Eng. Sci., Osaka Univ., Toyonaka, Japan
Abstract :
To control the carrier envelope phase (CEP) is very important when we employ a few cycle electro-magnetic pulses for nonlinear phenomena such as higher-order harmonic generation [1], strong-field ionization and dissociation[2], and population transfer between two bound states [3]. Hence it should also be essential for nonlinear spectroscopy in the terahertz (THz) frequency region. Recently, the generation of extremely intense monocycle THz pulses has been established with the nonresonant optical rectification process and various THz nonlinear spectroscopies have been demonstrated [4]. The CEP of such THz pulses is originally locked in principle. However, to change the CEP arbitrarily has been impossible so far. To overcome the task, we focused our attention on the novel property of a series of parallel plate waveguides. For the TE mode in the waveguide [5], the phase velocity vp is larger than the light velocity c in the vacuum while the group velocity vg is smaller. If the chirp caused by the group velocity dispersion is negligible, the CEP of the THz pulse is changed during its propagation in the dispersive medium.The schematic of the dispersive medium, which we used for the CEP control is shown in Fig. 1 (a). It consists of tens of 50×10×0.1mm3 stainless plates aligned with an equal spacing of 3, 2, and 1mm. The cut-off frequencies of the media are c/2g =0.05, 0.07, and 0.15 THz, respectively. Figure 1(b) shows the temporal electric-field profile of the transmitted THz pulse with the polarization parallel (TE mode; bold) and perpendicular (TEM mode; thin) to the steel plates. In the case of g=1mm, the profile for the TE mode pulse is chirped due to the group velocity dispersion. The chirp is negligible for g≥2mm and we can clearly see the carrier phase of the pulse slightly shifts towards earlier time keeping the envelope phase stable. This means that the CEP of the THz pulse is obviously modulated; the shifted value- is ~π/2 CEP for g=2mm. Figure 1 (c) shows the complex transmission coefficient of these medium, and the transmissivity of this optics is above 50%. Such arbitrary-CEP-controlled THz pulses will give us a new field of phase-sensitive THz nonlinear spectroscopy.
Keywords :
bound states; chirp modulation; light polarisation; light transmission; microwave photonics; nonlinear optics; optical control; optical dispersion; optical harmonic generation; optical modulation; optical phase shifters; optical waveguides; stainless steel; terahertz spectroscopy; terahertz wave generation; artificial dispersive medium; bound state population transfer; carrier envelope phase control; distance 1 mm; distance 2 mm; distance 3 mm; electro-magnetic pulses; extremely intense monocycle terahertz pulse generation; frequency 0.05 THz; frequency 0.07 THz; frequency 0.15 THz; group velocity dispersion; higher-order harmonic generation; light propagation; nonresonant optical rectification process; optical pulse chirping; parallel plate waveguides; phase velocity; phase-sensitive terahertz nonlinear spectroscopy; polarization parallel TE mode; polarization perpendicular TEM mode; stainless steel plates; strong-field dissociation; strong-field ionization; temporal electric-field profile; terahertz frequency region; terahertz pulse modulation; terahertz pulse shifting; terahertz pulse transmission coefficient; Chirp; Dispersion; Educational institutions; Ionization; Nonlinear optics; Optical waveguides; Spectroscopy;
Conference_Titel :
Lasers and Electro-Optics Europe (CLEO EUROPE/IQEC), 2013 Conference on and International Quantum Electronics Conference
Conference_Location :
Munich
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-0593-5
DOI :
10.1109/CLEOE-IQEC.2013.6800804