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A highly efficient, practical approach to high-energy multi-cycle terahertz (THz) generation based on spectrally cascaded optical parametric amplification (THz-COPA) is introduced. Feasible designs are presented that enable the THz wave, initially generated by difference frequency generation between a narrowband optical pump and optical seed (0.1-10% of pump energy), to self-start a cascaded (or repeated) energy downconversion of pump photons in a single pass through a single crystal. In cryogenically cooled, periodically poled lithium niobate, unprecedented energy conversion efficiencies >8% achievable with existing pump laser technology are predicted using realistic simulations. The calculations account for cascading effects, absorption, dispersion, and laser-induced damage. Due to the simultaneous, coupled nonlinear evolution of multiple phase-matched three-wave mixing processes, THz-COPA exhibits physics distinctly different from conventional three-wave mixing parametric amplifiers. This, in turn, governs optimal phase-matching conditions, evolution of optical spectra, and limitations of the nonlinear process. Circumventing these limitations is shown to yield conversion efficiencies ≫10%.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/OL.41.003806 | DOI Listing |
Ann Appl Stat
March 2025
Departments of Statistical Science & Mathematics, Duke University.
There is abundant interest in assessing the joint effects of multiple exposures on human health. This is often referred to as the mixtures problem in environmental epidemiology and toxicology. Classically, studies have examined the adverse health effects of different chemicals one at a time, but there is concern that certain chemicals may act together to amplify each other's effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe high-sensitivity quantum detection of a resonant classical force acting on a quantum harmonic oscillator can be significantly improved by employing a resonant optical parametric transducer. This technique leverages the unique properties of parametric interactions to enhance the response of the measurement system while maintaining quantum-limited performance. We demonstrate that such a configuration not only enables quantum back-action evading (BAE) measurements, surpassing the Standard Quantum Limit (SQL) of sensitivity, it also provides a mechanism for noiseless amplification of the classical signal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFemtosecond, broadband stimulated Raman spectroscopy is a popular approach to measuring molecular dynamics with excellent signal-to-noise and spectral resolution. We present a new method for broadband stimulated Raman spectroscopy that employs Kerr instability amplification to amplify the supercontinuum spectrum from sapphire and create a highly tunable Raman probe spectrum spanning from 530 to 1000 nm (-6000 to 2800 cm). Our method, called Kerr instability amplification for broadband-stimulated Raman spectroscopy (KAB-SRS) provides an alternative to optical parametric amplifiers by producing a broader and more tunable spectrum at a significantly reduced cost to OPA implementations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
August 2025
Research Laboratory of Electronics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA.
Observing non-classical properties of light is a long-standing interest to advance a wide range of quantum applications. Optical cavities are essential to generate and manipulate non-classical light. However, detecting changes in cavity properties induced by the quantum state remains a critical challenge in the optical domain due to the weak material nonlinearity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRepetition-rate upscaling of intense, femtosecond-duration pulses in the short-wave infrared is necessary to further develop and apply tabletop, ultrafast soft-X-ray sources. Here, we present a 20 fs-pulse-duration, 2.1 µm-central-wavelength, optical parametric chirped-pulse amplification laser, which outputs 52 W of amplified signal power at a repetition rate of 52.
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