Simon Holzberger
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by Simon Holzberger.
Optics Letters | 2014
Henning Carstens; Nikolai Lilienfein; Simon Holzberger; Christoph Jocher; Tino Eidam; Jens Limpert; Andreas Tünnermann; Johannes Weitenberg; Dylan C. Yost; A. Alghamdi; Z.A. Alahmed; Abdallah M. Azzeer; Alexander Apolonski; Ernst E. Fill; Ferenc Krausz; Ioachim Pupeza
We investigate power scaling of ultrashort-pulse enhancement cavities. We propose a model for the sensitivity of a cavity design to thermal deformations of the mirrors due to the high circulating powers. Using this model and optimized cavity mirrors, we demonstrate 400 kW of average power with 250 fs pulses and 670 kW with 10 ps pulses at a central wavelength of 1040 nm and a repetition rate of 250 MHz. These results represent an average power improvement of one order of magnitude compared to state-of-the-art systems with similar pulse durations and will thus benefit numerous applications such as the further scaling of tabletop sources of hard x rays (via Thomson scattering of relativistic electrons) and of soft x rays (via high harmonic generation).
Optics Express | 2013
Henning Carstens; Simon Holzberger; Jan Kaster; Johannes Weitenberg; V. Pervak; Alexander Apolonskiy; Ernst E. Fill; Ferenc Krausz; Ioachim Pupeza
In passive enhancement cavities the achievable power level is limited by mirror damage. Here, we address the design of robust optical resonators with large spot sizes on all mirrors, a measure that promises to mitigate this limitation by decreasing both the intensity and the thermal gradient on the mirror surfaces. We introduce a misalignment sensitivity metric to evaluate the robustness of resonator designs. We identify the standard bow-tie resonator operated close to the inner stability edge as the most robust large-mode cavity and implement this cavity with two spherical mirrors with 600 mm radius of curvature, two plane mirrors and a round trip length of 1.2 m, demonstrating a stable power enhancement of near-infrared laser light by a factor of 2000. Beam radii of 5.7 mm × 2.6 mm (sagittal × tangential 1/e(2) intensity radius) on all mirrors are obtained. We propose a simple all-reflective ellipticity compensation scheme. This will enable a significant increase of the attainable power and intensity levels in enhancement cavities.
Optics Letters | 2015
Simon Holzberger; Nikolai Lilienfein; Michael K. Trubetskov; Henning Carstens; F. Lücking; V. Pervak; Ferenc Krausz; Ioachim Pupeza
The optimal enhancement of broadband optical pulses in a passive resonator requires a seeding pulse train with a specific carrier-envelope-offset frequency. Here, we control the phase of the cavity mirrors to tune the offset frequency for which a given comb is optimally enhanced. This enables the enhancement of a zero-offset-frequency train of sub-30-fs pulses to multi-kW average powers. The combination of pulse duration, power, and zero phase slip constitutes a crucial step toward the generation of attosecond pulses at multi-10-MHz repetition rates. In addition, this control affords the enhancement of pulses generated by difference-frequency mixing, e.g., for mid-infrared spectroscopy.
Optics Express | 2013
Dominik Esser; Johannes Weitenberg; Wiebke Broering; Ioachim Pupeza; Simon Holzberger; Hans-Dieter Hoffmann
We demonstrate micro structuring of fused-silica laser mirror substrates by Inverse Laser Drilling. Slits of a width down to ~80 µm and circular holes with diameters down to ~50 µm have been structured into quarter-inch thick substrates. Except for chipping, the surface areas around these openings have not been irreversibly affected by the manufacturing process. The micro structured mirrors can be used for geometrical output coupling of coherent EUV radiation from cavity-enhanced high harmonic generation.
Optics Letters | 2017
Nicolai Lilienfein; Christina Hofer; Simon Holzberger; C. Matzer; P. Zimmermann; Michael K. Trubetskov; V. Pervak; Ioachim Pupeza
We address the challenge of increasing the bandwidth of high-finesse femtosecond enhancement cavities and demonstrate a broad spectrum spanning 1800 cm-1 (195 nm) at -10 dB around a central wavelength of 1050 nm in an EC with an average finesse exceeding 300. This will benefit a host of spectroscopic applications, including transient absorption spectroscopy, direct frequency comb spectroscopy, and Raman spectroscopy. The pulse circulating in the EC is composed of only 5.4 optical cycles, at a kilowatt-level average power. Together with a suitable gating technique, this paves the way to the efficient generation of multi-megahertz-repetition-rate isolated extreme ultraviolet attosecond pulses via intracavity high-order harmonic generation.
Optics Letters | 2015
Nikolai Lilienfein; Henning Carstens; Simon Holzberger; Christoph Jocher; Tino Eidam; Jens Limpert; Andreas Tünnermann; Alexander Apolonskiy; Ferenc Krausz; Ioachim Pupeza
Thermal lensing poses a serious challenge for the power scaling of enhancement cavities, in particular when these contain transmissive elements. We demonstrate the compensation of the lensing induced by thermal deformations of the cavity mirrors with the thermal lensing in a thin Brewster plate. Using forced convection to fine-tune the lensing in the plate, we achieve average powers of up to 160 kW for 250-MHz-repetition-rate picosecond pulses with a power-independent mode size. Furthermore, we show that the susceptibility of the cavity mode size to thermal lensing allows highly sensitive absorption measurements.
Optics Express | 2015
Oliver de Vries; Tobias Saule; Marco Plötner; F. Lücking; Tino Eidam; Armin Hoffmann; Arno Klenke; Steffen Hädrich; Jens Limpert; Simon Holzberger; Thomas Schreiber; Ramona Eberhardt; Ioachim Pupeza; Andreas Tünnermann
We introduce and experimentally validate a pulse picking technique based on a travelling-wave-type acousto-optic modulator (AOM) having the AOM carrier frequency synchronized to the repetition rate of the original pulse train. As a consequence, the phase noise characteristic of the original pulse train is largely preserved, rendering this technique suitable for applications requiring carrier-envelope phase stabilization. In a proof-of-principle experiment, the 1030-nm spectral part of an 74-MHz, carrier-envelope phase stable Ti:sapphire oscillator is amplified and reduced in pulse repetition frequency by a factor of two, maintaining an unprecedentedly low carrier-envelope phase noise spectral density of below 68 mrad. Furthermore, a comparative analysis reveals that the pulse-picking-induced additional amplitude noise is minimized, when the AOM is operated under synchronicity. The proposed scheme is particularly suitable when the down-picked repetition rate is still in the multi-MHz-range, where Pockels cells cannot be applied due to piezoelectric ringing.
Advanced Solid-State Lasers Congress (2013), paper AW2A.3 | 2013
Sven Breitkopf; Tino Eidam; Lorenz von Grafenstein; Arno Klenke; Henning Carstens; Simon Holzberger; Ioachim Pupeza; Thomas Schreiber; Ernst E. Fill; Jens Limpert; Ferenc Krausz; Andreas Tünnermann
We present a promising concept to reach femtosecond pulses with over 1 J energy at repetition rates of 15 kHz using a combination of fiber-amplifiers and ultra-long, non-steady-state enhancement-cavities. We show first preliminary results for a 10 MHz cavity.
Applied Physics B | 2017
Nikolai Lilienfein; Simon Holzberger; Ioachim Pupeza
State-of-the-art optical switches for coupling pulses into and/or out of resonators are based on either the electro-optic or the acousto-optic effect in transmissive elements. In high-power applications, the damage threshold and other nonlinear and thermal effects in these elements impede further improvements in pulse energy, duration, and average power. We propose a new optomechanical switching concept which is based solely on reflective elements and is suitable for switching times down to the ten-nanosecond range. To this end, an isolated section of a beam path is moved in a system comprising mirrors rotating at a high angular velocity and stationary imaging mirrors, without affecting the propagation of the beam thereafter. We discuss three variants of the concept and exemplify practical parameters for its application in regenerative amplifiers and stack-and-dump enhancement cavities. We find that optomechanical pulse picking has the potential to achieve switching rates of up to a few tens of kilohertz while supporting pulse energies of up to several joules.
High-Brightness Sources and Light-Driven Interactions (2016), paper HM6B.6 | 2016
Henning Carstens; Maximilian Högner; Tobias Saule; Simon Holzberger; Nikolai Lilienfein; Alexander Guggenmos; Tino Eidam; Dominik Esser; V. Tosa; Vladimir Pervak; Jens Limpert; Andreas Tünnermann; Ulf Kleineberg; Ferenc Krausz; Ioachim Pupeza
We demonstrate a power improvement of two orders of magnitude to the nW-level for multi-MHz-repetition-rate high-harmonic generation in the 100-eV range, driven in an enhancement cavity by 30-fs, 10-kW average-power pulses at 250 MHz.