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Direct frequency comb spectroscopy in the extreme ultraviolet

  • Arman Cingöz
  • , Dylan C. Yost
  • , Thomas K. Allison
  • , Axel Ruehl
  • , Martin E. Fermann
  • , Ingmar Hartl
  • , Jun Ye

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

444 Scopus citations

Abstract

The development of the optical frequency comb (a spectrum consisting of a series of evenly spaced lines) has revolutionized metrology and precision spectroscopy owing to its ability to provide a precise and direct link between microwave and optical frequencies. A further advance in frequency comb technology is the generation of frequency combs in the extreme-ultraviolet spectral range by means of high-harmonic generation in a femtosecond enhancement cavity. Until now, combs produced by this method have lacked sufficient power for applications, a drawback that has also hampered efforts to observe phase coherence of the high-repetition-rate pulse train produced by high-harmonic generation, which is an extremely nonlinear process. Here we report the generation of extreme-ultraviolet frequency combs, reaching wavelengths of 40-nanometres, by coupling a high-power near-infrared frequency comb to a robust femtosecond enhancement cavity. These combs are powerful enough for us to observe single-photon spectroscopy signals for both an argon transition at 82-nanometres and a neon transition at 63-nanometres, thus confirming the combs coherence in the extreme ultraviolet. The absolute frequency of the argon transition has been determined by direct frequency comb spectroscopy. The resolved ten-megahertz linewidth of the transition, which is limited by the temperature of the argon atoms, is unprecedented in this spectral region and places a stringent upper limit on the linewidth of individual comb teeth. Owing to the lack of continuous-wave lasers, extreme-ultraviolet frequency combs are at present the only promising route to extending ultrahigh-precision spectroscopy to the spectral region below 100-nanometres. At such wavelengths there is a wide range of applications, including the spectroscopy of electronic transitions in molecules, experimental tests of bound-state and many-body quantum electrodynamics in singly ionized helium and neutral helium, the development of next-generation nuclear clocks and searches for variation of fundamental constants using the enhanced sensitivity of highly charged ions.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)68-71
Number of pages4
JournalNature
Volume482
Issue number7383
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2 2012

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