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Characterization of arbitrary femtosecond pulses using frequency-resolved optical gating
845
Citations
35
References
1993
Year
Transient GratingEngineeringLaser ScienceWave OpticLaser PhysicsOptical MetrologyFiber OpticsOptical CharacterizationFrequency-resolved Optical GatingShort-pulse LasersArbitrary Femtosecond PulsesOptical PropertiesOptical SystemsFrog TraceBiophysicsUltrafast LasersFiber LaserPhotonicsPhysicsUltrafast Laser PhysicsReference PulseOptical PhysicApplied PhysicsUltrafast Optics
The frequency-resolved optical gating (FROG) technique for characterizing and displaying arbitrary femtosecond pulses is presented. The method is simple, general, broadband, and does not require a reference pulse. Using virtually any instantaneous nonlinear-optical effect, FROG involves measuring the spectrum of the signal pulse as a function of the delay between two input pulses. The resulting trace of intensity versus frequency and delay is related to the pulse's spectrogram a visually intuitive transform containing time and frequency information. It is proven using phase retrieval concepts that the FROG trace yields the full intensity I(t) and phase phi (t) of an arbitrary ultrashort pulse with no physically significant ambiguities. FROG appears to have temporal resolution limited only by the response of the nonlinear medium. The method is demonstrated by using self-diffraction through the electronic Kerr effect in BK-7 glass and 620-nm, linearly chirped, approximately 200-fs pulses of a few microjoules.< <ETX xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">></ETX>
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