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Dive into the research topics where Charles G. Durfee is active.

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Featured researches published by Charles G. Durfee.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 1998

High power ultrafast lasers

S. Backus; Charles G. Durfee; Margaret M. Murnane; Henry C. Kapteyn

In this article, we review progress in the development of high peak-power ultrafast lasers, and discuss in detail the design issues which determine the performance of these systems. Presently, lasers capable of generating terawatt peak powers with unprecedented short pulse duration can now be built on a single optical table in a small-scale laboratory, while large-scale lasers can generate peak power of over a petawatt. This progress is made possible by the use of the chirped-pulse amplification technique, combined with the use of broad-bandwidth laser materials such as Ti:sapphire, and the development of techniques for generating and propagating very short (10–30 fs) duration light pulses. We also briefly summarize some of the new scientific advances made possible by this technology, such as the generation of coherent femtosecond x-ray pulses, and the generation of MeV-energy electron beams and high-energy ions.


Optics Letters | 1999

Intense 8-fs pulse generation in the deep ultraviolet

Charles G. Durfee; S. Backus; Henry C. Kapteyn; Margaret M. Murnane

By use of the recently developed technique of guided-wave frequency conversion, the generation of sub-10-fs light pulses in the UV has been demonstrated for what is believed to be the first time. Cross-phase modulation of the light in a hollow waveguide produced a bandwidth of 16 nm, with a center frequency of 270 nm, at 1 kHz. A simple grating pair was used to compress the pulses to a duration of 8 fs, as measured by self-diffraction frequency-resolved optical gating. In the experiment the compressed energy was greater than 1 muJ , with a peak power of >100 MW ; the technique can be scaled to higher energy. Further improvements should make it possible to generate pulses as short as approximately 3 fs with this technique.


Optics Letters | 1997

Ultrabroadband phase-matched optical parametric generation in the ultraviolet by use of guided waves

Charles G. Durfee; S. Backus; Margaret M. Murnane; Henry C. Kapteyn

We present what is believed to be the first experimental demonstration of guided-wave phase-matched frequency mixing and harmonic conversion in gases. Broad-bandwidth ultrafast pulses, tunable around 270 nm, were generated from an ultrafast Ti:sapphire amplifier system using 2? + 2? - ? parametric wave mixing in a capillary waveguide. We achieved nonresonant phase matching by coupling both the fundamental and the second-harmonic light into the lowest-order mode. The output 3? pulses have an energy of >4muJ at a 1-kHz repetition rate. Simple extensions of this method can generate higher-energy 10-20-fs pulses tunable throughout the vacuum ultraviolet.


Optics Letters | 1997

0.2-TW laser system at 1 kHz

S. Backus; Charles G. Durfee; G. Mourou; Henry C. Kapteyn; Margaret M. Murnane

We have developed a 1-kHz repetition-rate Ti:sapphire laser system that can simultaneously generate high peak and average powers of 0.2TW and 4W, respectively. The laser system generates 4-mJ energy pulses with a 20-fs pulse width. We eliminated thermal lensing in the system by cooling the Ti:sapphire crystal to 125K. The output 20-fs pulses were fully characterized by use of the new technique of transient-grating frequency-resolved optical gating. We demonstrate experimentally that the pulse duration at the output is limited only by fifth-order dispersion.


Optics Express | 2010

Temporally focused femtosecond laser pulses for low numerical aperture micromachining through optically transparent materials

Dawn Vitek; Daniel E. Adams; Adrea Johnson; Philbert S. Tsai; Sterling Backus; Charles G. Durfee; David Kleinfeld; Jeff Squier

Temporal focusing of spatially chirped femtosecond laser pulses overcomes previous limitations for ablating high aspect ratio features with low numerical aperture (NA) beams. Simultaneous spatial and temporal focusing reduces nonlinear interactions, such as self-focusing, prior to the focal plane so that deep (~1 mm) features with parallel sidewalls are ablated at high material removal rates (25 µm3 per 80 µJ pulse) at 0.04-0.05 NA. This technique is applied to the fabrication of microfluidic devices by ablation through the back surface of thick (6 mm) fused silica substrates. It is also used to ablate bone under aqueous immersion to produce craniotomies.


Physics of Plasmas | 1996

Development and applications of a plasma waveguide for intense laser pulses

H. M. Milchberg; T. R. Clark; Charles G. Durfee; Thomas M. Antonsen; P. Mora

The demonstration of optical guiding of high‐intensity laser pulses in a plasma fiber waveguide [C. G. Durfee III and H. M. Milchberg, Phys. Rev. Lett. 71, 2409 (1993)] has opened the way to new advances in the development of nonlinear optics‐based short‐wavelength light sources, soft x‐ray lasers, and compact laser‐driven charged particle accelerators, and offers a new practical realm in which to study, control, and apply nonperturbative laser–matter interactions at ultrahigh intensity. An overview of selected experimental and theoretical results and their applications is presented.


Optics Letters | 2007

Simultaneous imaging of multiple focal planes using a two-photon scanning microscope

Wafa Amir; Ramón Carriles; Erich E. Hoover; Thomas A. Planchon; Charles G. Durfee; Jeff Squier

Despite all the advances in nonlinear microscopy, all existing instruments are constrained to obtain images of one focal plane at a time. In this Letter we demonstrate a two-photon absorption fluorescence scanning microscope capable of imaging two focal planes simultaneously. This is accomplished by temporally demultiplexing the signal coming from two focal volumes at different sample depths. The scheme can be extended to three or more focal planes.


Optics Express | 2012

Direct diode-pumped Kerr-lens mode-locked Ti:sapphire laser

Charles G. Durfee; Tristan Storz; Jonathan Garlick; Steven Hill; Jeff Squier; Matthew S. Kirchner; Greg Taft; Kevin Shea; Henry C. Kapteyn; Margaret M. Murnane; Sterling Backus

We describe a Ti:sapphire laser pumped directly with a pair of 1.2W 445nm laser diodes. With over 30mW average power at 800 nm and a measured pulsewidth of 15fs, Kerr-lens-modelocked pulses are available with dramatically decreased pump cost. We propose a simple model to explain the observed highly stable Kerr-lens modelocking in spite of the fact that both the mode-locked and continuous-wave modes are smaller than the pump mode in the crystal.


Optics Letters | 2006

Efficient reflection grisms for pulse compression and dispersion compensation of femtosecond pulses

Emily A. Gibson; David M. Gaudiosi; Henry C. Kapteyn; Ralph Jimenez; Steve Kane; Rachel Huff; Charles G. Durfee; Jeff Squier

Efficient reflection grisms for pulse-compression and material-dispersion compensation have been designed and demonstrated in a 40 fs, 300 microJ, 5 kHz downchirped pulse amplification system for the first time to our knowledge. A grism design for 800 nm femtosecond laser pulse dispersion compensation applications is realized by using standard, commercial diffraction gratings.


Optics Letters | 2009

Generation of 4.3 fs, 1 mJ laser pulses via compression of circularly polarized pulses in a gas-filled hollow-core fiber

Xiaowei Chen; Aurélie Jullien; Arnaud Malvache; Lorenzo Canova; Antonin Borot; Alexandre Trisorio; Charles G. Durfee; R. Lopez-Martens

We report the generation of 4.3 fs, 1 mJ pulses at 1 kHz using a hollow-core fiber compressor seeded with circularly polarized laser pulses. We observe up to 30% more energy throughput compared to the case of linearly polarized laser input, together with significantly improved output spectral stability. Seeding with circularly polarized pulses proves to be an effective approach for high-energy operation of the hollow-fiber compression technique.

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Jeff Squier

Colorado School of Mines

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Henry C. Kapteyn

University of Colorado Boulder

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Margaret M. Murnane

University of Colorado Boulder

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S. Backus

University of Colorado Boulder

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Amanda Meier

Colorado School of Mines

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Daniel E. Adams

University of Colorado Boulder

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Sterling Backus

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Wafa Amir

Colorado School of Mines

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