Generating laser-pulse enantiomers

We present an optical setup capable of mirroring an arbitrary, potentially time-varying, polarization state of an ultrashort laser pulse. The incident beam is split up in two and the polarization of one beam is mirrored by reflection off a mirror in normal incidence. Afterwards, both beams are recom...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inOptics express Vol. 25; no. 18; pp. 21735 - 21752
Main Authors Steinbacher, Andreas, Hildenbrand, Heiko, Schott, Sebastian, Buback, Johannes, Schmid, Marco, Nuernberger, Patrick, Brixner, Tobias
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 04.09.2017
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Summary:We present an optical setup capable of mirroring an arbitrary, potentially time-varying, polarization state of an ultrashort laser pulse. The incident beam is split up in two and the polarization of one beam is mirrored by reflection off a mirror in normal incidence. Afterwards, both beams are recombined in time and space such that two collinear ultrashort laser pulses with mutually mirrored polarization, i.e., laser-pulse enantiomers, leave the setup. We employ the Jones formalism to describe the function of the setup and analyze the influence of alignment errors before describing the experimental implementation and alignment protocol. Since no wave plates are utilized, broadband pulses in a large wavelength range can be processed. In particular, we show that the setup outperforms broadband achromatic wave plates. Furthermore, since the two beams travel separately through the optical system they can be blocked independently. This opens the possibility for circular dichroism, ellipsometry, and anisotropy spectroscopy with shot-to-shot chopping and detection schemes as well as chiral coherent control applications.
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ISSN:1094-4087
1094-4087
DOI:10.1364/OE.25.021735