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Ultrafast Cooperative Phenomena in Coherently Prepared Media: From Superfluorescence to Coherent Raman Scattering and ApplicationsGombojav, Ariunbold 2011 May 1900 (has links)
Technological progress in commercializing ultrafast lasers and detectors has allowed realization of cooperative processes on an ultrashort time scale, which demand a re-evaluation of the conventional cooperative phenomena with a new insight. Ultrafast cooperative phenomena in coherently prepared media and various applications of superfluorescence and coherent Raman scattering are studied in this dissertation. In particular, a simple theoretical testimony on analogy between a cooperative emission and coherent Raman scattering is presented by offering an opportunity to perform parallel research on these two processes from a unified point of view.
On one hand, the superfluorescent pulse with a time duration of a few tens of picoseconds (ps) from alkali metal vapor is observed for the first time, even though cooperative phenomena in atomic vapor have been extensively studied for more than five decades. A dense rubidium vapor pumped by ultrashort (100 femtosecond, fs) pulses allows a realization of the ultrafast superfluorescence while a time-resolved study of superfluorescence is accomplished by using a streak camera with 2 ps time resolution. Experimental research on quantum nature of cooperative emissions has been “frozen” over the years (three decades) possibly because of the technical difficulties. Quantum fluctuations of superfluorescence development are explored experimentally by taking advantage of the ultra fast streak camera. Presumable applications of the superfluorescent pulse in e.g., a remote sensing, and an ultraviolet upconversion of the input infrared laser pulse are presented. The quantum interference due to different excitation pathways is revealed by the temporal coherent control technique while observing interferometric signals from alkali metal vapors.
On the other hand, a new spectroscopic technique based on ultrafast coherent Raman scattering is developed. The key advantage of the presented technique is to suppress the non-resonant background noise which usually obscures possible applications of the other conventional coherent Raman techniques in practice. A reduction of the background noise is achieved by shaping and delaying the third pulse which probes the coherence of the medium (i.e., an enhancement of specific vibrations of the target molecules in unison) firstly prepared by two broadband pulses. We demonstrate a robustness and superiority of signal-to-noise ratio of the developed technique by identifying as few as 10000 bacterial spores at a single laser shot level.
Finally, several comparative studies between cooperative and uncooperative processes are presented. A picosecond cooperative phenomenon in a three-photon resonant medium induced by a single as well as two-color ultrashort pulses is investigated. A time-resolved study shows that a picosecond cooperative effect is crucial in the well-established fields of resonant-enhanced multiphoton ionizations and harmonic generations. We also present a quantitative analysis for spontaneous versus broadband coherent Raman scattering on pyridine molecules. The spontaneous Raman signal is enhanced by 5 orders as a result of cooperative phenomena.
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