A Flying Focus with Arbitrary Directionality
POSTER
Abstract
Flying focus techniques produce laser pulses whose focal points travel at arbitrary, controllable velocities. While this flexibility can enhance a broad range of laser-based applications, existing techniques constrain the motion of the focal point to the propagation direction of the pulse. Here, we introduce a flying focus configuration that decouples the motion of the focus from the propagation direction. A chirped laser pulse focused by a chromatic lens and diffracted by a grating creates a focal point that can move both along and transverse to the propagation direction. The chromaticity and focal length of the lens, grating period, and chirp can be tuned to control the direction and velocity of the focus. Simulations demonstrate this control for a holographic configuration suited to high-power pulses, in which two off-axis pump beams with different focal lengths encode the equivalent phase of a chromatic lens and grating in a gas or plasma. For low-power pulses, conventional solid-state or adaptive optics can be used instead. Multi-dimensional control over the focal trajectory enables new configurations for applications, including laser wakefield acceleration of ions, steering of broadband THz radiation, and surface harmonic generation.
This work was partially supported by NSF Grant PHY-2308641. The work of JPP is supported by the Office of Fusion Energy Sciences under Award Number DE-SC0021057, the University of Rochester, and the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority.
This work was partially supported by NSF Grant PHY-2308641. The work of JPP is supported by the Office of Fusion Energy Sciences under Award Number DE-SC0021057, the University of Rochester, and the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority.
Presenters
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Sida Cao
Stanford University
Authors
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Sida Cao
Stanford University
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Devdigvijay Singh
Stanford University
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Lavonne S Mack
Laboratory for Laser Energetics (LLE)
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John P Palastro
Laboratory for Laser Energetics (LLE)
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Matthew R Edwards
Stanford University