Crystals (Feb 2021)
Photoionization-Induced Broadband Dispersive Wave Generated in an Ar-Filled Hollow-Core Photonic Crystal Fiber
Abstract
The resonance band in hollow-core photonic crystal fiber (HC-PCF), while leading to high-loss region in the fiber transmission spectrum, has been successfully used for generating phase-matched dispersive wave (DW). Here, we report that the spectral width of the resonance-induced DW can be largely broadened due to plasma-driven blueshifting soliton. In the experiment, we observed that in a short length of Ar-filled single-ring HC-PCF the soliton self-compression and photoionization effects caused a strong spectral blueshift of the pump pulse, changing the phase-matching condition of the DW emission process. Therefore, broadening of DW spectrum to the longer-wavelength side was obtained with several spectral peaks, which correspond to the generation of DW at different positions along the fiber. In particular, we numerically used the super-Gauss windows with different central wavelengths to filter out these DW spectral peaks and studied the time-domain characteristics of these peaks respectively using Fourier transform method. We observed that these multiple-peaks on the DW spectrum have different delays in the time domain, which is in good agreement with our theoretical prediction. More interestingly, we found that the broadband DW with several spectral peaks can be compressed to ~29 fs after proper dispersion compensation. The results reported here, on the one hand, provide some useful insights into the resonance-induced DW generation process in gas-filled HC-PCFs. On the other hand, the DW-emission mechanism could be used to generate the ultrashort light sources with a wide spectral range through using the proper design of the resonance bands of the HC-PCFs, which has many applications in the ultrafast related experiments.
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