Simplified Chirp Characterization in Single-shot Supercontinuum Spectral Interferometry (1806.01222v1)
Abstract: Single-shot supercontinuum spectral interferometry (SSSI) is an optical technique that can measure ultrafast transients in the complex index of refraction. This method uses chirped supercontinuum reference/probe pulses that need to be pre-characterized prior to use. Conventionally, the spectral phase (or chirp) of those pulses can be determined from a series of phase or spectral measurements taken at various time delays with respect to a pump-induced modulation. Here we propose a novel method to simplify this process and characterize reference/probe pulses up to the third order dispersion from a minimum of 2 snapshots taken at different pump-probe delays. Alternatively, without any pre-characterization, our method can retrieve both unperturbed and perturbed reference/probe phases, including the pump-induced modulation, from 2 time-delayed snapshots. From numerical simulations, we show that our retrieval algorithm is robust and can achieve high accuracy even with 2 snapshots. Without any apparatus modification, our method can be easily applied to any experiment that uses SSSI.
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.