Abstract
We report the generation of few-cycle multiterawatt light pulses with a temporal contrast of , when measured as close as to the pulse’s peak. Tens of picoseconds before the main pulse, the contrast value is expected to spread much beyond the measurement limit. Separate measurements of contrast improvement factors at different stages of the laser system indicate that real contrast values may reach and , when measured 50 and before the pulse’s peak, respectively. The combination of the shortest pulse duration and the highest contrast renders our system a promising front-end architecture for future multipetawatt laser facilities.
© 2011 Optical Society of America
Optical fields of relativistic intensities turn matter into hot, fully ionized plasma whose electrons acquire velocities approaching the speed of light [1]. Thanks to high-power lasers, these unique physical conditions can now be realized in small-scale laboratories and constitute the main subject of relativistic optical science [1]. Many areas of this science benefit from a combination of few-cycle duration with ultrahigh temporal contrast of powerful laser pulses. The few-cycle duration is crucial for the generation of intense isolated attosecond pulses in the relativistic laser–solid interaction [2] and helpful in particle acceleration [3]. Moreover, in combination with pulse energies of , the few-cycle pulse duration allows for reaching peak powers of from systems with unparalleled compactness. At relativistic intensities, the temporal contrast, defined as the ratio of the pulse’s peak intensity to the intensity at a given time instant before the peak, is critical for a well-controlled laser–matter interaction experiment. Premature ionization of matter by the pulse-preceding background, typically consisting of prepulses, nano or picosecond pedestals, and a nonexponential leading edge of the main pulse, results in the formation of a rapidly expanding plasma long before the arrival of the main pulse. This effect radically modifies target conditions and seriously limits experiments that rely on the interaction of light with solid-density plasmas.
To the best of our knowledge, the highest previously achieved contrast value is tens of picoseconds before the main pulse (with a duration of tens of femto seconds) obtained by using either a cross-polarized wave generation (XPW) technique [4, 5] or a plasma mirror (PM) [6]. Here we show that the integration of both techniques into the optical parametric chirped pulse amplification (OPCPA) system furnishes few-cycle multiterawatt light pulses with an intensity contrast of when measured only before the pulse peak. On a longer time scale, the contrast value exceeds our measurement limit but can be estimated on the basis of separate measurements of contrast enhancement factors of XPW, OPCPA, and PM. The estimated contrast yields and , when measured 50 and before the pulse peak, respectively. These estimations exceed previously reported state of the art by several orders of magnitude.
Our system is based on OPCPA [7] and is capable of generating pulses with a sub-three-optical-cycle duration (FWHM) and peak power of up to [8]. The basic architecture of the system is shown in Fig. 1. In brief, pulses at a central wavelength of from a Ti:sapphire oscillator are amplified in a multipass Ti:sapphire amplifier and spectrally broadened in a neon-filled hollow core fiber (HCF). Temporally stretched by a negative-dispersion grism stretcher and acousto-optical modulator (Dazzler, FASTLITE) to the duration of , these pulses provide a seed for two noncollinear OPCPA stages. The pump pulses for OPCPA with a duration of (FWHM) and energy of are optically synchronized with the seed pulses. Two OPCPA stages boost the seed pulse energy up to within the spectral band of 700–, constituting a broadband parametric gain of more than . After amplification, the chirped pulse is recompressed with a positive dispersion bulk glass precompressor and four chirped multilayer mirrors in a vacuum chamber.
The temporal contrast of the pulse is enhanced by virtue of short-pump OPCPA and two nonlinear-optical techniques highlighted in the upper panels of Fig. 1: XPW [4, 5] and PM [9, 10, 11]. XPW is applied after the HCF, before OPCPA. To this end, the pulse is compressed by means of a double-angle chirped mirror compressor to a duration and sent through a polarizer (upper left panel in Fig. 1) in order to enhance the purity of the linear polarization of the input beam. Next, it is focused into a thick crystal, wherein the polarization of the short (thus intense) pulse is rotated in a third-order nonlinear process. The crossed polarizer after the crystal (the analyzer in Fig. 1) is used to suppress the residues of the original polarization. Finally, the beam is collimated and the “cleaned” pulse is stretched for seeding OPCPA. The conversion efficiency of XPW yields 15%. The cleaning technique based on a single PM (upper right panel in Fig. 1) is used at the final stage of the system after OPCPA and pulse recompression into the sub- regime. For this purpose, pulses are focused in the vacuum with an off-axis parabolic mirror (OAP) on an antireflection (AR)-coated glass target. Detrimental temporal pedestals, with the flux lower than the ionization threshold, are transmitted through an AR-coated target, while the main pulse is reflected from the plasma created on the target surface by the foot of the pulse. The light flux in the focus is . The AR-coated target is automatically rotated to provide a fresh surface for every laser shot. Regarding future applications, we note that our diameter targets allow for the continuous operation of PM for more than at a repetition rate. The PM-reflected beam is collimated by a second OAP and sent to diagnostics of the reflected pulse energy, spectrum, duration, contrast, beam profile, and focus. The energy reflectivity of PM was measured to be , resulting in output pulse energy. The pulse contrast was measured with a homebuilt high-dynamic-range third-order autocorrelator [12]. This instrument is based on third-harmonic generation (THG) in two consecutive beta barium borate (BBO) crystals and allows for measuring the intensity contrast over a dynamic range of about .
The resultant THG autocorrelation trace of the pulse is shown by blue dots in Fig. 2. Here denotes the time delay between the fundamental beam and sampling second harmonic in the THG process. The zero delay represents the peak of the pulse. The problematic pulse-preceding background is probed in the domain of negative delays. The inset of Fig. 2 shows the THG autocorrelation trace on a fine scale featuring the contrast value of at . On a longer time scale, the real contrast is expected to exceed the dynamic range of our autocorrelator. To estimate its actual value, we measured the degree of contrast enhancement by each of the three cleaning techniques separately. The estimated contrast, calculated on the basis of measured contrast enhancement factors, is shown by the red (lower) line in Fig. 2. Below, we explain how this estimation was obtained.
The contrast enhancement by OPCPA is shown in Fig. 3a, featuring THG autocorrelation traces before and after OPCPA stages. The seed pulse for OPCPA has a nanosecond pedestal with the contrast of at [gray (middle) line in Fig. 3a], which is due to amplified spontaneous emission in the Ti:sapphire amplifier. This pedestal is amplified by OPCPA only within a short duration of the OPCPA pump that is about . The OPCPA energy gain is measured to be more than () around the peak of the pump. Thus, outside the temporal window of the pump (i.e., for ) the background is at least times suppressed. In our measurements, the OPCPA gain was independent of the input contrast; therefore, to measure the contrast improvement due to OPCPA, we decreased the front-end contrast as is shown by the red (upper) line in Fig. 3a. The contrast improvement is demonstrated by the fall of the autocorrelation from to , shown by the blue (lower) line in Fig. 3a as well as the green (upper) line in Fig. 3b. The noise floor in Fig. 3a limits the observed contrast improvement to , while the improvement of is demonstrated by the green (upper) line in Fig. 3b. The effect of the amplified parametric fluorescence (APF) creates an additional background within the OPCPA temporal window. In our measurements, it was not detected above the dynamic range of the correlator— at . Nevertheless, as a precaution we took the latter value into account as a lower limit of the APF contrast.
The contrast improvement by XPW is shown in Fig. 3b. Here the green (upper) line depicts the THG autocorrelation measured with OPCPA only (XPW and PM bypassed) and the blue (middle) line shows the autocorrelation measured with XPW; both measurements were made with the decreased front-end contrast. An improvement of due to XPW is clearly seen for . The contrast measured with XPW and OPCPA with optimal front-end contrast is shown by the gray (lower) line in Fig. 3b. Note that the foot of the pulse extending over is not affected by XPW because it originates from the stretching and compression of the few-cycle pulse after XPW.
The results of the contrast improvement by PM are shown in Fig. 3c, where red squares show the THG autocorrelation when bypassing PM and the blue solid line denotes the result measured with PM. The contrast enhancement of 500 on average is clearly seen. This enhancement factor holds true for any delay because, as is seen from Fig. 3c, the reflecting plasma starts to be generated at the surface of the AR-coated target at . Remarkably, even the foot of the pulse on a scale is rendered steeper by PM. Measurements with a worse input contrast (bypassing XPW and/or with the misaligned front end) also demonstrated stable contrast improvement of for delays . In fact, the improvement due to PM depends only on the reflectivity of the AR-coating of the PM target and the reflectivity of the generated plasma that was independent of the input contrast in our operating conditions.
Based on measured contrast improvement factors of XPW, OPCPA, and PM and taking into account the lower limit of APF, one can estimate the real contrast as
where the curves , , and are denoted in Fig. 3 and C is shown by the red (lower) line in Fig. 2The applicability of PM to few-cycle pulses required experimental verification, as PM could in principle alter the pulse duration by the effect of pulse chirping in expanding plasmas. We have measured, for the first time to our knowledge, the duration of the pulse before and after PM using a single-shot second-order autocorrelation [8]. The second-order autocorrelation taken after PM is shown by the blue dots in Fig. 3d and the red line shows the second-order autocorrelation calculated by Fourier transforming the pulse spectrum [shown in the inset of Fig. 3d], assuming the constant phase. The FWHM of the pulse envelope, deconvolved from the measured autocorrelation, is and is not affected by PM.
The demonstrated ultrahigh-contrast few-cycle multiterawatt light pulses open the door to a new class of high- field experiments, in which solid matter with sharp density gradients can be abruptly exposed to electromagnetic fields at relativistic intensities. Implications include the generation of isolated attosecond pulses at substantially increased photon energy and/or power levels. Moreover, this light source lends itself to further amplification in Ti:sapphire and/or OPCPA stages, offering a route to high-contrast multipetawatt pulses for exploring new physics [13].
This work is supported by the DFG-Project TR–18, by the Association EURATOM, Max-Planck-Institut für Plasmaphysik, and by the Munich Centre for Advanced Photonics (MAP) excellence cluster. J. M. Mikhailova acknowledges support from the Alexander-von-Humboldt Foundation and Russian Foundation for Basic Research (RFBR) grant 11-02-01217.
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