We experimentally demonstrate that pumping a gradedindex multimode fiber with sub-ns pulses from a microchip Nd:YAG laser leads to spectrally flat supercontinuum generation with a uniform bell-shaped spatial beam profile extending from the visible to the mid-infrared at 2500 nm. We study the development of the supercontinuum along the multimode fiber by the cut-back method, which permits us to analyze the competition between the Kerr-induced geometric parametric instability and stimulated Raman scattering. We also performed a spectrally resolved temporal analysis of the supercontinuum emission. The strong modal confinement and the versatile dispersion engineering of single-mode fibers (SMFs) have permitted to demonstrate efficient and spatially coherent supercontinuum (SC) sources spanning from the ultra-violet to the mid-infrared (MIR) [1]. However, the small mode area of SMFs limits the accepted energy to relatively low values (less than 20 μJ for subns pulses). For this reason, SC sources based on SMFs cannot be used for applications where high pulse energies are required. Although multimode fibers (MMFs), such as graded-index (GRIN) fibers, permit the propagation of high energy pulses, these are subject to mode beating and mixing, owing to the difference of modal propagation constants and linear mode coupling. Modal interference brings a speckled intensity pattern at the MMF output, which prevents the use of MMFs whenever the preservation of spatial beam quality is required [2].Recent experiments by Krupa et al. [3] led to the unexpected discovery that Kerr nonlinearity of glass fibers above a certain threshold pulse power may lead to the generation of a selfsustained bell-shaped nonlinear beam in a highly multimode GRIN fiber. This means that linear mode mixing can be effectively washed out by means of the Kerr effect, so that a cleaned multimode light beam remains effectively selfpreserved. Kerr self-cleaning (KSC) stems from nonlinear coupling among the fundamental mode and higher-order modes [3,4]. KSC occurs at power levels at least one order of magnitude lower than the critical power of catastrophic light self-focusing in a GRIN MMF [5]. Because it is a conservative process, KSC is fundamentally different from the well-known Raman beam cleanup that is observed at the Stokes wavelength [6]. In addition, KSC occurs before a substantial pump spectral broadening has occurred [3]. For powers above the KSC threshold, nonlinear spectral broadening in MMFs results from a complex interplay between the spatial and temporal degrees of freedom [7][8][9]. Because of the self-imaging of the multimode beams in a GRIN MMF, the Kerr effect leads to a long-period intensity grating which induces mode conversion [4] and quasi-phase-matched (QPM) four-wave mixing (FWM) [10]. For temporal multimode femtosecond solitons in the anomalous dispersion regime [11], the nonlinear index grating produces an effective periodic nonlinearity which, in turn, induces a series of dispersive wave sidebands [12,13]. On the other hand, for ...
We present a bi-directionally 793-nm diode-pumped Tm3+, Ho3+-codoped silica polarization maintaining double-clad all-fiber laser based on a single-oscillator architecture emitting 195 W at 2.09 µm in continuous wave mode of operation, with a beam quality near the diffraction limit (M2 = 1.08). The power scaling of the laser is only pump-power-limited in the range of the total available pump power (540 W).
We present a bimodal imaging system able to obtain epi-detected mutiplex coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (M-CARS) and second harmonic generation (SHG) signals coming from biological samples. We studied a fragment of mouse parietal bone and could detect broadband anti-Stokes and SHG responses originating from bone cells and collagen respectively. In addition we compared two post-processing methods to retrieve the imaginary part of the third-order nonlinear susceptibility related to the spontaneous Raman scattering.
International audienceAn optimized broadband source emitting from 1064 to 1600 nm was specially designed for coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering spectroscopy. This source is based on the use of a ytterbium-doped photonic crystal fiber with a large core in which a supercontinuum is generated from a signal wave at 1064 nm regenerated by ytterbium ions pumping. A particularly flat spectrum with high spectral power density and perfectly synchronized spectral components is obtained
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