TY - JOUR
T1 - Tracing the phase of focused broadband laser pulses
AU - Hoff, Dominik
AU - Krüger, Michael
AU - Maisenbacher, Lothar
AU - Sayler, A. M.
AU - Paulus, Gerhard G.
AU - Hommelhoff, Peter
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2017 Macmillan Publishers Limited, part of Springer Nature. All rights reserved.
PY - 2017/10/4
Y1 - 2017/10/4
N2 - Precise knowledge of the behaviour of the phase of light in a focused beam is fundamental to understanding and controlling laser-driven processes. More than a hundred years ago, an axial phase anomaly for focused monochromatic light beams was discovered and is now commonly known as the Gouy phase 1-4 . Recent theoretical work has brought into question the validity of applying this monochromatic phase formulation to the broadband pulses becoming ubiquitous today 5,6 . Based on electron backscattering at sharp nanometre-scale metal tips, a method is available to measure light fields with sub-wavelength spatial resolution and sub-optical-cycle time resolution 7-9 . Here we report such a direct, three-dimensional measurement of the spatial dependence of the optical phase of a focused, 4-fs, near-infrared pulsed laser beam. The observed optical phase deviates substantially from the monochromatic Gouy phase - exhibiting a much more complex spatial dependence, both along the propagation axis and in the radial direction. In our measurements, these significant deviations are the rule and not the exception for focused, broadband laser pulses. Therefore, we expect wide ramifications for all broadband laser-matter interactions, such as in high-harmonic and attosecond pulse generation, femtochemistry 10 , ophthalmological optical coherence tomography 11,12 and light-wave electronics 13 .
AB - Precise knowledge of the behaviour of the phase of light in a focused beam is fundamental to understanding and controlling laser-driven processes. More than a hundred years ago, an axial phase anomaly for focused monochromatic light beams was discovered and is now commonly known as the Gouy phase 1-4 . Recent theoretical work has brought into question the validity of applying this monochromatic phase formulation to the broadband pulses becoming ubiquitous today 5,6 . Based on electron backscattering at sharp nanometre-scale metal tips, a method is available to measure light fields with sub-wavelength spatial resolution and sub-optical-cycle time resolution 7-9 . Here we report such a direct, three-dimensional measurement of the spatial dependence of the optical phase of a focused, 4-fs, near-infrared pulsed laser beam. The observed optical phase deviates substantially from the monochromatic Gouy phase - exhibiting a much more complex spatial dependence, both along the propagation axis and in the radial direction. In our measurements, these significant deviations are the rule and not the exception for focused, broadband laser pulses. Therefore, we expect wide ramifications for all broadband laser-matter interactions, such as in high-harmonic and attosecond pulse generation, femtochemistry 10 , ophthalmological optical coherence tomography 11,12 and light-wave electronics 13 .
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85030640456&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys4185
DO - https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys4185
M3 - مقالة
SN - 1745-2473
VL - 13
SP - 947
EP - 951
JO - Nature Physics
JF - Nature Physics
IS - 10
ER -