Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

37
Pulse description --- a propagating pulse A Bandwidth limited pulse No Fourier Transform involved Fourier transforms review Slowly Varying Envelope Approximation OPTICS OF SHORT PULSES with minimum of equations, maximum of analogies and hand waving.

description

OPTICS OF SHORT PULSES. with minimum of equations, maximum of analogies and hand waving. A Bandwidth limited pulse. No Fourier Transform involved. Pulse description --- a propagating pulse. Fourier transforms review. Slowly Varying Envelope Approximation. A Bandwidth limited pulse. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

Page 1: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

A Bandwidth limited pulse No Fourier Transform involved

Fourier transforms review

Slowly Varying Envelope Approximation

OPTICS OF SHORT PULSES

with minimum of equations, maximum of analogies and hand waving.

Page 2: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

time0

Electric fieldamplitude

Many frequencies in phase construct a pulse

A Bandwidth limited pulse

Page 3: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

FREQUENCY

Time and frequency considerations: stating the obvious

TIME

E

A Bandwidth limited pulse

Page 4: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

FREQUENCY

The spectral resolution of the cw wave is lost

TIME

E

A Bandwidth limited pulse

Page 5: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

z

t

z = ctz = vgt

A propagating pulse

Page 6: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

t

A Bandwidth limited pulse

Page 7: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

We may need the Fourier transforms (review)

0

Page 8: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

Shift

Derivative

Linear superposition

Specific functions: Square pulse Gaussian Single sided exponential

Real E(E*(-

Linear phase

Product Convolution

Derivative

Properties of Fourier transforms

Page 9: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

Construct the Fourier transform of

0

Page 10: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

Description of an optical pulse

Real electric field:

Fourier transform:

Positive and negative frequencies: redundant information Eliminate

Relation with the real physical measurable field:

Instantaneous frequency

Page 11: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

We have to return to Maxwell's propagation equation:

In frequency

How to correctly propagate an ultrashort pulse without phase and group velocity

It is only if That the pulse propagates unchanged at velocity n/c

Group velocity is a concept that is clearly related to the SVEA

Page 12: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse
Page 13: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

Maxwell’s equations, linear propagation

Propagation of the complex field

Maxwell’s equations, nonlinear propagation

Pulse broadening, dispersion

Page 14: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

Maxwell’s equations, linear propagation

Dielectrics, no charge, no current:

Medium equation:

can be a tensor birefringence

Page 15: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

In a linear medium:

Page 16: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

Maxwell’s equations, nonlinear propagation

Maxwell’s equation:

Since the E field is no longer transverse

Gadi Fibich and Boaz Ilan PHYSICAL REVIEW E 67, 036622 (2003)

Is it important?

Only if

Page 17: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

20 0

02

n nE P

z c t z c t t

2 2 2 20

02 2 2 2

nE P

z c t t

22

2F FP P

t

Study of propagation from second to first order

Page 18: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

From Second order to first order (the tedious way)

( ) ( )kz kz

2 2 2 20 i t i t

02 2 2 2

ne P e

z c t t

2 2 22

2 2 2 2 2

22

0 0 02

1 2ik 2ik

c z c t c t z

P i P Pt t

01 i cP

z c t 2

(Polarization envelope)

Page 19: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

Pulse broadening, dispersion

Page 20: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

Solution of 2nd order equation

22

02

( ) ( , ) 0E zz

0( ) (1 ( ))

( )( , ) ( , ) ik zE z E 0 e

( ) ( )2 20k

0( )P E Propagation through medium

No change in frequency spectrum

To make F.T easier shift in frequencyExpand k value around central freq l

l

( )( , ) ( , ) lik zz 0 e ε εz

Z=0

1( , ) ( , ) ( )

2i tE t z E z e d

1

0gz v t

ε ε

Study of linear propagation

Expand k to first order, leads to a group delay:

Page 21: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

Expansion orders in k(Material property

l

l

2| 22

1( , ) ( ,0) (1 | ( ) ) ( )

2l

dkiik z i td d k

t z e e e i z dd

ε ε

( )( , ) ( , ) lik zz 0 e ε εll

| ( )| ( )( , )

22

2 l

1 d kdk i zi z ik z2d d0 e e e

ε

l

l

| ( )( , ) ( | ( ) ) l

dk 2i z 2 ik zd2

1 d k0 e 1 i z e

2 d

ε

22

2

( ) 1( ) ( )

2ixtt

x x e d xt

ε ε

2 2

2 2

10

2g

i d k

z v t d t

ε ε ε

Study of linear propagation

Page 22: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

Propagation in dispersive media: the pulse is chirped and broadening

Propagation in nonlinear media: the pulse is chirped

Combination of both: can be pulse broadening, compression,Soliton generation

Page 23: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

Propagation in the time domain

PHASE MODULATION

n(t)or

k(t)

E(t) = (t)eit-kz

(t,0) eik(t)d (t,0)

Page 24: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

DISPERSION

n()or

k()() ()e-ikz

Propagation in the frequency domain

Retarded frame and taking the inverse FT:

Page 25: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

PHASE MODULATION

DISPERSION

Page 26: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse
Page 27: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

Townes’soliton

Eigenvalue equation (normalized variables. Solution of type:

2D nonlinear Schroedinger equation

Normalization: and

Soliton equation in space

Page 28: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

In space:

In time

Page 29: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

Back to linear propagation: Gaussian pulse

Page 30: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

-6 -4 -2 0 2 4 6

-1

0

1

-20 -10 0 10 20

Delay (fs)

Pulse propagation through 2 mm of BK7 glass

Page 31: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

Pulse duration, Spectral width

Two-D representation of the field: Wigner function

Page 32: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

-2 -1 0 1 2

-2

-1

0

1

2

-2 -1 0 1 2

-2

-1

0

1

2

Time TimeF

requ

ency

Fre

quen

cy

-2 -1 0 1 2

-2

-1

0

1

2

-2 -1 0 1 2

-2

-1

0

1

2

Time TimeF

requ

ency

Fre

quen

cyGaussian Chirped Gaussian

Wigner Distribution

Page 33: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

Wigner function: What is the point?

Uncertainty relation:

Equality only holds for a Gaussian pulse (beam) shape free of anyphase modulation, which implies that the Wigner distribution for aGaussian shape occupies the smallest area in the time/frequencyplane.

Only holds for the pulse widths defined as the mean square deviation

Page 34: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

A Bandwidth limited pulse

Some (experimental) displays of electric field versus time

-6 -4 -2 0 2 4 6

-1

0

1

-20 -10 0 10 20

Delay (fs)

How was this measured?

Page 35: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

A Bandwidth limited pulse

Some (experimental) displays of electric field versus time

-20 -10 0 10 20

Delay (fs)

Page 36: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

Chirped pulse

Page 37: Pulse description --- a propagating pulse

Construct the Fourier transform of

Pulse Energy, Parceval theorem

Poynting theorem

Pulse energy

Parceval theorem

Intensity?

Spectral intensity