Abstract
Ultrafast lasers have a crucial function in many fields of science; however, up to now, high-energy pulses directly from compact, efficient and low-power semiconductor lasers are not available. Therefore, we introduce a new approach based on temporal compression of the continuous-wave, wavelength-swept output of Fourier domain mode-locked lasers, where a narrowband optical filter is tuned synchronously to the round-trip time of light in a kilometre-long laser cavity. So far, these rapidly swept lasers enabled orders-of-magnitude speed increase in optical coherence tomography. Here we report on the generation of ∼60-70 ps pulses at 390 kHz repetition rate. As energy is stored optically in the long-fibre delay line and not as population inversion in the laser-gain medium, high-energy pulses can now be generated directly from a low-power, compact semiconductor-based oscillator. Our theory predicts subpicosecond pulses with this new technique in the future .© 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Eigenwillig, C. M., Wieser, W., Todor, S., Biedermann, B. R., Klein, T., Jirauschek, C., & Huber, R. (2013). Picosecond pulses from wavelength-swept continuous-wave Fourier domain mode-locked lasers. Nature Communications, 4. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms2870
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