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Previous work has demonstrated that frequency combs coupled with a high resolution spectrometer, consisting of a virtually imaged phased array (VIPA) along with a grating, can perform time-resolved, broadband and high- resolution absorption spectroscopy with a single frequency comb. The VIPA spectrometer disperses the spectrum in two dimensions and images it onto a focal plane detector array. If the comb teeth can be resolved, the VIPA is easily calibrated and provides comb-tooth resolved resolution and accuracy. However, in previous work, the repetition rate of the laser sources used was too low to be resolved directly, and additional passive "filter cavities" had to be employed to increase the effective repetition rate of the frequency comb. In this work we use a fully stabilized mid infrared frequency comb based on a 1.6 GHz repetition rate modelocked vertical external cavity surface emitting laser (VECSEL) and difference frequency generation to produce an off set free comb in the 3- 4 micron wavelength range. The source is directly coupled to the VIPA spectrometer to provide comb-tooth resolved absorption spectroscopy. We discuss the system's performance in gas absorption spectroscopy and its time resolving capabilities, which are limited only by the speed of the detector system.
Here, we investigate the performance and robustness of a SESAM-modelocked VECSEL system under intense pulse intensity excitation. The effect of the degradation on the VECSEL performance is investigated using the SESAM in a VECSEL cavity supporting ultrashort pulses, while the degradation mechanism was investigated by exciting the SESAMs with an external femtosecond laser source. The decay of the photoluminescence (PL) and reflectivity under high excitation was monitored and the damaged samples were further analyzed using a thorough Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) analysis. It is found that the major contribution to the degradation is the field intensity and that the compositional damage is confined to the DBR region of the SESAM.
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