Interferometric autocorrelation in the ultra-violet utilizing spontaneous parametric down-conversion

2017 
Autocorrelation is a common method to estimate the duration of ultra-short laser pulses. In the ultra-violet (UV) regime it is increasingly challenging to employ the standard process of second harmonic generation, most prominently due to absorption in nonlinear crystals at very short wavelengths. Here we show how to utilize spontaneous parametric down-conversion (SPDC) to generate an autocorrelation signal for UV pulses in the infrared. Our method utilizes the $n^{\text{th}}$ order emission of the SPDC process, which occurs for low pumping powers proportional to the $n^{\text{th}}$ power of the UV intensity. Thus, counting $2n$ down-converted photons directly yields the $n^{\text{th}}$-order autocorrelation. The method, now with detection of near infrared photons with high efficiency, is applied here to the first direct measurement of ultra-short UV-pulses (approximately $176\, \text{fs}$, center wavelength $390\, \text{nm}$) inside a UV enhancement cavity.
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