A. Pugžlys
Vienna University of Technology
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Featured researches published by A. Pugžlys.
Optics Letters | 2011
Giedrius Andriukaitis; Tadas Balčiūnas; S. Ališauskas; A. Pugžlys; Andrius Baltuska; Tenio Popmintchev; Ming-Chang Chen; Margaret M. Murnane; Henry C. Kapteyn
We demonstrate a compact 20 Hz repetition-rate mid-IR OPCPA system operating at a central wavelength of 3900 nm with the tail-to-tail spectrum extending over 600 nm and delivering 8 mJ pulses that are compressed to 83 fs (<7 optical cycles). Because of the long optical period (∼13 fs) and a high peak power, the system opens a range of unprecedented opportunities for tabletop ultrafast science and is particularly attractive as a driver for a highly efficient generation of ultrafast coherent x-ray continua for biomolecular and element specific imaging.
Optics Letters | 2009
Oliver D. Mücke; S. Ališauskas; Aart J. Verhoef; A. Pugžlys; Andrius Baltuska; V. Smilgevicius; Jonas Pocius; Linas Giniūnas; R. Danielius; Nicolas Forget
We demonstrate a four-stage optical parametric chirped-pulse amplification system that delivers carrier-envelope phase-stable approximately 1.5 microm pulses with energies up to 12.5 mJ before recompression. The system is based on a fusion of femtosecond diode-pumped solid-state Yb technology and a picosecond 100 mJ Nd:YAG pump laser. Pulses with 62 nm bandwidth are recompressed to a 74.4 fs duration close to the transform limit. To show the way toward a terawatt-peak-power single-cycle IR source, we demonstrate self-compression of 2.2 mJ pulses down to 19.8 fs duration in a single filament in argon with a 1.5 mJ output energy and 66% energy throughput.
Scientific Reports | 2015
A. V. Mitrofanov; A. A. Voronin; D. A. Sidorov-Biryukov; A. Pugžlys; E. A. Stepanov; Giedrius Andriukaitis; Tobias Flöry; S. Ališauskas; A. B. Fedotov; Andrius Baltuska; Aleksei M. Zheltikov
Filamentation of ultrashort laser pulses in the atmosphere offers unique opportunities for long-range transmission of high-power laser radiation and standoff detection. With the critical power of self-focusing scaling as the laser wavelength squared, the quest for longer-wavelength drivers, which would radically increase the peak power and, hence, the laser energy in a single filament, has been ongoing over two decades, during which time the available laser sources limited filamentation experiments in the atmosphere to the near-infrared and visible ranges. Here, we demonstrate filamentation of ultrashort mid-infrared pulses in the atmosphere for the first time. We show that, with the spectrum of a femtosecond laser driver centered at 3.9 μm, right at the edge of the atmospheric transmission window, radiation energies above 20 mJ and peak powers in excess of 200 GW can be transmitted through the atmosphere in a single filament. Our studies reveal unique properties of mid-infrared filaments, where the generation of powerful mid-infrared supercontinuum is accompanied by unusual scenarios of optical harmonic generation, giving rise to remarkably broad radiation spectra, stretching from the visible to the mid-infrared.
Optics Letters | 2013
Pavel Malevich; Giedrius Andriukaitis; Tobias Flöry; A. J. Verhoef; Alma Fernandez; S. Ališauskas; A. Pugžlys; Andrius Baltuska; L. H. Tan; C. F. Chua; P. B. Phua
We have developed the first (to our knowledge) femtosecond Tm-fiber-laser-pumped Ho:YAG room-temperature chirped pulse amplifier system delivering scalable multimillijoule, multikilohertz pulses with a bandwidth exceeding 12 nm and average power of 15 W. The recompressed 530 fs pulses are suitable for broadband white light generation in transparent solids, which makes the developed source ideal for both pumping and seeding optical parametric amplifiers operating in the mid-IR spectral range.
Optics Letters | 2012
Daniil Kartashov; S. Ališauskas; A. Pugžlys; Alexander Voronin; Aleksei M. Zheltikov; Massimo Petrarca; Pierre Olivier Bejot; Jérôme Kasparian; Jean-Pierre Wolf; Andrius Baltuska
We report the first (to our knowledge) experimental results and numerical simulations on mid-IR femtosecond pulse filamentation in argon using 0.1 TW peak-power, 80 fs, 3.9 μm pulses. A broadband supercontinuum spanning the spectral range from 350 nm to 5 μm is generated, whereby about 4% of the mid-IR pulse energy is converted into the 350-1700 nm spectral region. These mid-IR-visible coherent continua offer a new, unique tool for time-resolved spectroscopy based on a mid-IR filamentation laser source.
Optics Letters | 2009
Oliver D. Mücke; Dmitry Sidorov; P. Dombi; A. Pugžlys; Andrius Baltuska; S. Ališauskas; V. Smilgevicius; Jonas Pocius; Linas Giniūnas; R. Danielius; Nicolas Forget
Carrier-envelope phase-stable 4 microJ pulses at approximately 1.5 microm are obtained from a femtosecond Yb:KGW-MOPA-pumped two-stage optical parametric amplifier. This novel technology represents a highly attractive alternative to traditional Ti:sapphire front-ends for seeding multimillijoule-level optical parametric chirped-pulse amplifiers. For this task, we demonstrate stretching of the OPA output to approximately 40 ps and recompression to 33 fs pulse duration. As a stand-alone system, our tunable two-stage OPA might find numerous applications in time-resolved spectroscopy and micromachining.
Optics Letters | 2013
Daniil Kartashov; S. Ališauskas; A. Pugžlys; A. A. Voronin; Aleksei M. Zheltikov; Massimo Petrarca; Pierre Olivier Bejot; Jérôme Kasparian; Jean-Pierre Wolf; Andrius Baltuska
We observed the filamentation of mid-infrared ultrashort laser pulses (3.9 μm, 80 fs) in molecular gases. It efficiently generates a broadband supercontinuum over two octaves in the 2.5-6 μm spectral range, with a red-shift up to 500 nm due to the Raman effect, which dominates over the blue shift induced by self-steepening and the gas ionization. As a result, the conversion efficiency into the Stokes region (4.3-6 μm) 65% is demonstrated.
Optics Express | 2008
D. A. Sidorov-Biryukov; Alma Fernandez; Lingxiao Zhu; A. Pugžlys; E. E. Serebryannikov; Andrius Baltuska; Aleksei M. Zheltikov
Spectral narrowing of nearly chirp-free 50-fs pulses delivered by a diode-pumped ytterbium solid-state laser (Yb DPSSL) is experimentally demonstrated using an anomalously dispersive, highly nonlinear photonic-crystal fiber (PCF). The ratio of spectral narrowing and the accompanying temporal pulse broadening are controlled by the peak power of Yb DPSSL pulses at the input of the fiber.
Optics Express | 2012
Pavel Malevich; Daniil Kartashov; Z. Pu; S. Ališauskas; A. Pugžlys; Andrius Baltuska; Linas Giniūnas; R. Danielius; A. A. Lanin; Aleksei M. Zheltikov; Marco Marangoni; Giulio Cerullo
By combining tunable broadband pulse generation with the technique of nonlinear spectral compression we demonstrate a prototype scheme for highly selective detection of air molecules by backward stimulated Raman scattering. The experimental results allow to extrapolate the laser parameters required for standoff sensing based on the recently demonstrated backward atmospheric lasing.
Nature Communications | 2016
V. Shumakova; Pavel Malevich; S. Ališauskas; A. A. Voronin; A. M. Zheltikov; Daniele Faccio; Daniil Kartashov; Andrius Baltuska; A. Pugžlys
The physics of strong-field applications requires driver laser pulses that are both energetic and extremely short. Whereas optical amplifiers, laser and parametric, boost the energy, their gain bandwidth restricts the attainable pulse duration, requiring additional nonlinear spectral broadening to enable few or even single cycle compression and a corresponding peak power increase. Here we demonstrate, in the mid-infrared wavelength range that is important for scaling the ponderomotive energy in strong-field interactions, a simple energy-efficient and scalable soliton-like pulse compression in a mm-long yttrium aluminium garnet crystal with no additional dispersion management. Sub-three-cycle pulses with >0.44 TW peak power are compressed and extracted before the onset of modulation instability and multiple filamentation as a result of a favourable interplay between strong anomalous dispersion and optical nonlinearity around the wavelength of 3.9 μm. As a manifestation of the increased peak power, we show the evidence of mid-infrared pulse filamentation in atmospheric air.