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Back to Colloquia
Physics Colloquium Friday, March 10th, 2006,
4:00 P.M.
E300 Math/Science
Center; Refreshments at 3:30 P.M. in
Room E200
Georgia Institute of Technology
Frontiers in the Characterization of Ultrashort
Laser Pulses
FROG (Frequency Resolved
Optical Gating) is a technique that
completely
characterizes an ultrashort laser pulse in time. Since its
introduction
about a decade ago, FROG has evolved into a fairly general and
powerful
technique for measuring ultrashort laser pulses. But to become truly
useful, any optical technique must go beyond the measurement of mere
laser
pulses, whose intensity and phase are well-behaved in space, time, and
frequency, and which have fairly high intensity. It will need to be
able to
measure, more generally, light pulses, whose intensity and phase are
not so
well-behaved in space, time, and frequency, and which often aren't
all that
intense. For example, we'd like to be able to measure ultrabroadband
continuum pulses from micro-structure optical fiber and ultraweak
luminescence from "non-fluorescent" molecules important in biology
and human
physiology--light pulses whose measurement will lead to new
technologies or
teach us important things about life, not just how well our laser is
aligned.
And we'd like to do so with confidence in our measurements. This
necessarily
means a simple device, not one so complex that it could easily cause
the
same distortions it hopes to measure. The goal is not a complex
device that
can only measure simple pulses, but a simple device that can measure
complex
pulses.
We are making good progress, and recent developments include
techniques for
measuring light pulses that are extremely weak, have poor spatial
coherence,
have random absolute phase, have spatio-temporal distortions, and/or
are
extremely complex--and our devices are quite simple.
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