Broad-band picosecond radiation may be produced by sending trains of pulses, or single pulses, from mode-locked high-power lasers through amorphous solids, liquids, and liquid mixtures. The broad-band picosecond radiation that results is useful, for example, in absorption spectroscopy of short-lived species. Broad-band picosecond light sources have been developed and used extensively by Rentzepis and co-workers. Pure H2O and pure D2O were employed to produce the broad-band picosecond continuum, which was considered to arise primarily from self-phase modulation in the pure liquids.
T. C. DamenM. A. DuguayJay ShahJ. StoneJ. M. WiesenfeldR. A. Logan
T. C. DamenM. A. DuguayJay ShahJ. StoneJ. M. WiesenfeldR. A. Logan
Shoaib AhmadS. A. JanjuaShahid HussainA. Ellahi