| Literature DB >> 28986590 |
G Insero1,2, S Borri1,2, D Calonico3, P Cancio Pastor1, C Clivati3, D D'Ambrosio1, P De Natale1,2, M Inguscio1, F Levi3, G Santambrogio4,5,6.
Abstract
High-resolution spectroscopy in the 1-10 μm region has never been fully tackled for the lack of widely-tunable and practical light sources. Indeed, all solutions proposed thus far suffer from at least one of three issues: they are feasible only in a narrow spectral range; the power available for spectroscopy is limited; the frequency accuracy is poor. Here, we present a setup for high-resolution spectroscopy, whose approach can be applied in the whole 1-10 μm range. It combines the power of quantum cascade lasers (QCLs) and the accuracy achievable by difference frequency generation using an orientation patterned GaP crystal. The frequency is measured against a primary frequency standard using the Italian metrological fibre link network. We demonstrate the performance of the setup by measuring a vibrational transition in a highly-excited metastable state of CO around 6 μm with 11 digits of precision.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28986590 PMCID: PMC5630624 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-12891-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1The left part of the figure shows the Italian fibre link network, blue line, with network nodes in red. At LENS/University of Florence (LENS in the following for brevity), the ultra stable laser at 1542 nm locks the repetition rate of a frequency comb. We measure the beat notes of two near-IR lasers against the frequency comb and keep their frequency difference constant with an indirect locking scheme to cancel out the comb noise contribution[29]. The two lasers are combined in an OP-GaP crystal to generate mid-IR light, to which we lock a quantum cascade laser. (The map is obtained on the basis of ©OpenStreetMap contributors (www.openstreetmap.org) licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 license (CC BY-SA) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/. The basis was then modified to fit our figure and we took no care to maintain proportions or accuracy).
Figure 2Phase noise of various components of the frequency locking chain. The phase noise of the free running QCL is shown in black. The noise on the fibre link is shown in blue. The error signal of the phase-lock loop for the pump laser is shown in green. The expected phase noise of the phase-locked QCL is shown in red and is obtained by scaling the phase noise of the pump laser, following the virtual beat note scheme.
Figure 3Top: a typical vibrational absorption spectrum on the metastable state of CO measured in about 25 minutes. The transition shows a width of 900 kHz. A Voigt fit of the data (blue line) yields an uncertainty of 3 kHz on the center frequency. Bottom: sketch of the molecular beam apparatus used for the measurement. The beam is generated by a pulsed valve operated at 10 Hz. CO molecules are skimmed, excited into the metastable state by a UV laser at 206 nm, interact with the mid IR laser, and are finally detected by resonance-enhanced multiphoton ionization. Ions are collected on a microchannel plates detector. Right: level diagram of the states involved in the triple resonance scheme.