Probing spatial properties of electronic excitation in water after interaction with temporally shaped femtosecond laser pulses: Experiments and simulations

DYNAMICS SOLIDS Temporal pulse shaping Water 01 natural sciences MEDIA Ultrashort laser ablation INDUCED BREAKDOWN Laser-induced breakdown CELLS 0103 physical sciences Femtosecond spectroscopy ABLATION Dielectrics BESSEL BEAMS TRANSPARENT DIELECTRICS Spectral interference
DOI: 10.1016/j.apsusc.2015.11.182 Publication Date: 2015-11-23T17:46:33Z
ABSTRACT
Abstract In this work, laser excitation of water under ambient conditions is investigated by radially resolved common-path spectral interferometry. Water, as a sample system for dielectric materials, is excited by ultrashort bandwidth-limited and temporally asymmetric shaped femtosecond laser pulses, where the latter start with an intense main pulse followed by a decaying pulse sequence, i.e. a temporal Airy pulse. Spectral interference in an imaging geometry allows measurements of the transient optical properties integrated along the propagation through the sample but radially resolved with respect to the transverse beam profile. Since the optical properties reflect the dynamics of the free-electron plasma, such measurements reveal the spatial characteristics of the laser excitation. We conclude that temporally asymmetric shaped laser pulses are a promising tool for high-precision laser material processing, as they reduce the transverse area of excitation, but increase the excitation inside the material along the beam propagation.
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