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06. November 2025

MBI researchers characterise ultrashort VUV light pulses with electron FROG

New technique enables complete analysis of femtosecond pulses in the vacuum ultraviolet range

Electron FROG apparatus. a. measured spectra of pulses tuned across the VUV, b. and c. electron FROG traces of pulses centered at 180 and 170 nm, respectively. b. shows the imprint of auto-ionizing states of xenon while c. exhibits a double-peak structure due to spin-orbit splitting. © MBI

A team of researchers at the Max Born Institute managed to fully characterise few-femtosecond-long light pulses tunable in the vacuum ultraviolet. These results unlock the possibility for studying valence electron dynamics of many materials in the VUV.

Few-femtosecond long pulses tunable across the ultraviolet (UV) are a holy grail of contemporary laser science. As most of the materials have electronic resonances in the deep- and vacuum-UV (VUV), such pulses enable the study of valence electron dynamics at an unprecedented temporal resolution. However, due to the Kramers-Kronig relation, the vicinity of resonances intrinsically invokes high material dispersion, which makes the handling and measurement of such pulses extremely difficult.

Recently, John C. Travers at the Heriot-Watt University, UK, developed a technique, which is ideal for the generation of µJ-level tunable few-fs UV pulses showing a wide tunability down to 110 nm. It uses resonant dispersive wave (RDW) emission following soliton self-compression in waveguides [1]. This technique requires very high quality hollow waveguides, which became first available by stretching flexible capillaries, an invention of the last author of the current MBI-work together with Peter Simon at the Institut für Nanophotonik Göttingen e.V., Germany [2].

Thanks to the continuous development of Travers' group, now the RDW technique is used for studies in a wide spectral range down to the deep-UV (~230 nm). However, shorter wavelengths of the VUV (100-200 nm) have not been explored yet, due to the immense technical difficulties connected to the high absorption and excessive dispersion of the materials in this regime.

Now scientists at the Max Born Institute, Berlin, Germany successfully extended the usability of the RDW technique to the VUV spectral range. They fully characterized few-fs pulses tuned between 160 and 190 nm by a technique that they call electron FROG. It is a variant of frequency-resolved optical gating (FROG) using two-photon ionization of noble gases as the nonlinearity. During the measurement, the kinetic energy spectrum of the photoelectrons is recorded as a function of the delay between two pulse replicas ionizing the gas target.

The recorded two-dimensional spectrograms contain information on the pulse shape that can be extracted by using an iterative phase-retrieval algorithm. However, unlike standard all-optical FROG traces, the electron FROG traces not only depend on the pulse shape, but also contain the fingerprint of the atomic structure of the target gas. This required the development of a special phase retrieval code based on a differential evolution algorithm. The measurements were validated by a series of checks including comparison of the results with ab initio quantum mechanical (TDSE) calculations. The in situ measurements reveal that the RDW-generated VUV pulses have a duration of 2-3 fs, in accordance with former predictions based on simulations.

The electron FROG apparatus was also used for pump-probe measurements on a series of small organic molecules, such as ethylene. These measurements, carried out with unprecedented temporal resolution, shed new light on the early-time relaxation dynamics after photo-excitation. Currently the measured data is being analysed and compared with molecular dynamical simulations.

[1] J. C. Travers, T. F. Grigorova, C. Brahms, and F. Belli, Nat. Photon. 13, 547-554 (2019).
[2] T. Nagy, M. Forster, and P. Simon, Appl. Opt. 47, 3264-3268 (2008).

Publication:

Temporal characterization of tunable few-cycle vacuum ultraviolet pulses
J. R. C. Andrade, M. Kretschmar, R. Danylo, S. Carlström,T. Witting, A. Mermillod-Blondin, S. Patchovskii, M.Y. Ivanov, M. J. J. Vrakking, A. Rouzée, T. Nagy
Nature Photonics volume 19, pages 1240–1246 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41566-025-01770-6

Contact:

Max Born Institute for Nonlinear Optics and Short Pulse Spectroscopy
Attosecond Physics
mbi-berlin.de

Dr. Martin Kretschmar
030 6392-1271
Martin.Kretschmar(at)mbi-berlin.de

Dr. Rostyslav Danylo
030 6392-1207
Rostyslav.Danylo(at)mbi-berlin.de

Prof. Dr. Marc Vrakking
030 6392-1200
Marc.Vrakking(at)mbi-berlin.de

 

MBI press release, 5 November 2025

Research Photonics / Optics

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