Title: Conical Waves in Nonlinear Optics and Applications
1Conical Waves in Nonlinear Optics and
Applications
- Paolo Polesana
- University of Insubria. Como (IT)
- paolo.polesana_at_uninsubria.it
2Summary
- Stationary states of the E.M. field
- Solitons
- Conical Waves
- Generating Conical Waves
- A new application of the CW
- A stationary state of E.M. field in presence of
losses - Future studies
3Stationarity of E.M. field
- Linear propagation of light
- Self-similar solution the Gaussian Beam
Slow Varying Envelope approximation
4Stationarity of E.M. field
- Linear propagation of light
- Self-similar solution the Gaussian Beam
-
- Nonlinear propagation of light
- Stationary solution the Soliton
5The Optical Soliton
The E.M. field creates a self trapping potential
1D Fiber soliton
Analitical stable solution
6Multidimensional solitons
Townes Profile
Diffraction balance with self focusing
Its unstable!
7Multidimensional solitons
Townes Profile
Diffraction balance with self focusing
8Multidimensional solitons
3D solitons
- Higher Critical Power
- Nonlinear losses destroy the pulse
9Conical Waves
A class of stationary solutions of both linear
and nonlinear propagation
- Interference of plane waves propagating in a
conical geometry - The energy diffracts during propagation, but the
figure of interference remains unchanged - Ideal CW are extended waves carrying infinite
energy
10An example of conical wave
Bessel Beam
11Bessel Beam
An example of conical wave
1 cm apodization
12Bessel Beam
1 cm apodization
Conical waves diffract after a maximal length
13Focal depth and Resolution are independently
tunable
6 microns Rayleigh Range
Wavelemgth 527 nm
10 cm diffr. free path
ß
ß 10
1 micron
3 cm apodization
14Bessel BeamGeneration
15Building Bessel Beams Holographic Methods
Thin circular hologram of radius D that is
characterized by the amplitude transmission
function
The geometry of the cone is determined by the
period of the hologram
16Different orders of diffraction create diffrerent
interfering Bessel beams
2-tone (black white)
Creates different orders of diffraction
17Central spot 180 microns Diffraction free path 80
cm
The corresponding Gaussian pulse has 1cm Rayleigh
range
18Building Nondiffracting Beamsrefractive methods
19Building Nondiffracting Beamsrefractive methods
- The geometry of the cone is determined by
- The refraction index of the glass
- The base angle of the axicon
20Holgrams Axicon
- Pro
- Easy to build
- Many classes of CW can be generated
- Contra
- Difficult to achieve sharp angles (low
resolution) - Different CWs interfere
- Pro
- Sharp angles are achievable (high resolution)
- Contra
- Only first order Bessel beams can be generated
21Bessel Beam Studies
22Drawbacks of Bessel Beam
High intensity central spot
Remove the negative effect of low contrast?
Slow decaying tails
bad localization low contrast
23The Idea
24Multiphoton absorption
excited state
virtual states
ground state
25Coumarine 120
- The peak at 350 nm perfectly corresponds to the
3photon absorption of a 3x3501050 nm pulse - The energy absorbed at 350 nm is re-emitted at
450 nm
26Result 1 Focal Depth enhancement
1 mJ energy
4 cm couvette filled with Coumarine-Methanol
solution
A
IR filter
Side CCD
Focalized beam 20 microns FWHM, 500 microns
Rayleigh range
27Result 1 Focal Depth enhancement
1 mJ energy
4 cm couvette filled with Coumarine-Methanol
solution
A
IR filter
Side CCD
B
Bessel beam of 20 microns FWHM and 10 cm
diffraction-free propagation
Focalized beam 20 microns FWHM, 500 microns
Rayleigh range
28- Comparison between the focal depth reached by
- the fluorescence excited by a Gaussian beam
- the fluorescence excited by an equivalent Bessel
Beam
A
80 Rayleigh range of the equivalent Gaussian!
B
4 cm
29Result 2 Contrast enhancement
3-photon Fluorescence
Linear Scattering
30Summary
- We showed an experimental evidence that the
multiphoton energy exchange excited by a Bessel
Beam has - Gaussian like contrast
- Arbitrary focal depth and resolution, each
tunable independently of the other - Possible applications
- Waveguide writing
- Microdrilling of holes (citare)
- 3D Multiphoton microscopy
31- Opt. Express Vol. 13, No. 16 August 08, 2005
32 P. Polesana, D.Faccio, P. Di Trapani,
A.Dubietis, A. Piskarskas, A. Couairon, M. A.
Porras High constrast, high resolution, high
focal depth nonlinear beams Nonlinear Guided
Wave Conference, Dresden, 6-9 September 2005
33Waveguides
Cause a permanent (or eresable or momentary)
positive change of the refraction index
34Laser 60 fs, 1 kHz
35Direct writing
Bessel writing
36Front view measurement
1 mJ energy
Front CCD
IR filter
37Front view measurement
38We assume continuum generation
39Bessel Beam nonlinear propagation simulations
Multiphoton Absorption
Third order nonlinearity
Input conditions pulse duration 1 ps Wavelength
1055 nm FWHM 20 microns 4 mm Gaussian
Apodization
K 3
10 cm diffraction free
40Bessel Beam nonlinear propagation simulations
FWHM 10 microns Dumped oscillations
Multiphoton Absorption
Third order nonlinearity
Input conditions pulse duration 1 ps Wavelength
1055 nm FWHM 20 microns 4 mm Gaussian
Apodization
41Spectra
Input beam
Output beam
42Front view measurementinfrared
1 mJ energy
Front CCD
IR filter
43A stationary state of the E.M. field in presence
of Nonlinear Losses
44Unbalanced Bessel Beam
Complex amplitudes
Ein
Eout
Ein
Eout
45Unbalanced Bessel Beam
- Loss of contrast (caused by the unbalance)
- Shift of the rings (caused by the detuning)
46UBB stationarity
1 mJ energy
Variable length couvette
Front CCD
z
47UBB stationarity
1 mJ energy
Variable length couvette
Front CCD
z
48UBB stationarity
radius (cm)
Input energy 1 mJ
radius (cm)
49Summary
- We propose a conical-wave alternative to the 2D
soliton. - We demonstrated the possibility of reaching
arbitrary long focal depth and resolution with
high contrast in energy deposition processes by
the use of a Bessel Beam. - We characterized both experimentally and
computationally the newly discovered UBB - 1. stationary and stable in presence of
nonlinear losses - 2. no threshold conditions in intensity are
needed
50Future Studies
- Application of the Conical Waves in material
processing (waveguide writing) - Further characterization of the UBB (continuum
generation, filamentation) - Exploring conical wave in 3D (nonlinear X and O
waves)