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The
general goal of this project is the development of sophisticated
short pulse laser sources. Laser concepts based on Ti:sapphire,
rare-earth-doped crystals and semiconductors for femtosecond and
picosecond oscillator and amplifier systems are under investigation.
One focus of this project is the progress of compact diode-pumped
femtosecond laser systems. The potential of novel ytterbium-doped
active materials and semiconductor structures is studied in the
1-µm spectral range. Optically-pumped semiconductor disk lasers
(SDL) have gained much attention in recent years, including the
possibility to achieve mode-locking by the use of a semiconductor
saturable absorber mirror (SESAM). This all-semiconductor approach
is particularly interesting because of its simple mode-locked laser
design – see feature article. Yb-doped laser crystals are well-suited
for building conceptually simple and highly efficient diode-pumped
sub-100 femtosecond lasers. Single-walled carbon-nanotube saturable
absorbers (SWCNT-SA) are unique nanostructures which exhibit, beside
novel electrical, chemical, and mechanical, also interesting optical
properties. Optical features such as fast third order optical nonlinearity
and saturable absorption qualify them as a potential replacement
for semiconductor-based ultrafast saturable absorbers (SESAMs).
Furthermore, SESAMs have to be fabricated by very complex epitaxial
processes and additional treatment is often required for reducing
the recovery time of the absorbing layer. Passive mode-locking with
transmission- and reflection-type SWCNT-SA is demonstrated for Yb-doped
bulk laser media.
A
major part of the project is dedicated to the development and the
optimization of special UV lasers, that are required for the operation
of RF photo injectors at the FLASH FEL (DESY Hamburg), PITZ (DESY
Zeuthen) und the forthcoming XFEL. Within 2008, this part of the
project was mainly focused on the development of a new pulse-shaping
technique optimized for photo injector drive lasers.
Another
part of the project is directed towards improvement of Ti:sapphire
laser technology, especially applied to the multi-terawatt High
Field Ti:sapphire Laser (HFL). This concerns increasing the peak
power through improvement of the pulse shape, recompression and
increasing the energy available for interaction experiments, improvement
of temporal contrast related to amplified spontaneous emission to
the value sufficient for pre-pulse free laser-matter interaction
(contrast >1010, for peak intensity
I >1020 W/cm2,
increasing the stability of HFL laser operation and other associated
issues.
Furthermore,
the development of a laser driver for an x-ray lasers (XRL) based
on the thin disk laser technology is part of the project. Using
Yb:YAG as active material, the laser system is planned to deliver
pulses up to 1 J at 100 Hz repetition rate. The specific optical
arrangement based of chirped pulse amplifications (CPA) allows to
generate optional nanosecond- or bandwidth-limited picosecond- pulses.
Although the laser system is optimized for XRL pumping it might
be an interesting choice as a pump source for an OPCPA (optical
parametric chirped pulse amplification) laser system generating
femtosecond pulses with a very high contrast in the 100 mJ range
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