Spatiotemporal optical vortices

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Abstract

We present the first experimental evidence, supported by theory and simulation, of spatiotemporal optical vortices (STOVs). A STOV is an optical vortex with phase and energy circulation in a spatiotemporal plane. Depending on the sign of the material dispersion, the local electromagnetic energy flow is saddle or spiral about the STOV. STOVs are a fundamental element of the nonlinear collapse and subsequent propagation of short optical pulses in material media, and conserve topological charge, constraining their birth, evolution, and annihilation. We measure a self-generated STOV consisting of a ring-shaped null in the electromagnetic field about which the phase is spiral, forming a dynamic torus that is concentric with and tracks the propagating pulse. Our results, here obtained for optical pulse collapse and filamentation in air, are generalizable to a broad class of nonlinearly propagating waves.

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Jhajj, N., Larkin, I., Rosenthal, E. W., Zahedpour, S., Wahlstrand, J. K., & Milchberg, H. M. (2016). Spatiotemporal optical vortices. Physical Review X, 6(3). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.6.031037

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