Tri-comb Spectroscopy

Invited

Abstract

Optical multidimenisonal coherent spectroscopy (MDCS) has been developed over the last 20 years and proven very powerful at unfolding congested spectra, identifying coupling between resonances, making size-resolved measurements of nanoparticles and revealing many-body interactions [1]. However, MDCS has required a complex apparatus and has suffered from limited spectral resolution.

Inspired by developments in dual-comb spectroscopy, we developed comb-based MDCS, improving the spectral resolution by over an order of magnitude, which we demonstrated by resolving the hyperfine split transitions in a rubidium vapor [2]. With the addition of third frequency comb, which we call "tri-comb spectroscopy," we are able to eliminate all moving parts and further improve the resolution with a data record of less the 0.5 seconds long [3]. These results also demonstrate the separation of the two isotopies of rubidium, showing the promise of MDCS for chemical sensing where the separation of species is a critical challenge.

These results open a path towards an implementation of MDCS that can rapidly produce spectra using a compact and robust apparatus that can be used outside a laboratory.

[1] 1. S. T. Cundiff and S. Mukamel, "Optical multidimensional coherent spectroscopy," Phys. Today 66, 44 (July 2013).
[2] B. Lomsadze and S. T. Cundiff, "Frequency combs enable rapid and high-resolution multidimensional coherent spectroscopy," Science 357, 1389–1391 (2017).
[3] B. Lomsadze, B. C. Smith, and S. T. Cundiff, "Tri-comb spectroscopy," Nat. Photonics 12 , 676–680 (2018).

Presenters

  • Steven Cundiff

    Department of Physics, University of Michigan

Authors

  • Steven Cundiff

    Department of Physics, University of Michigan

  • Bachana Lomsadze

    Department of Physics, University of Michigan

  • Brad C Smith

    Department of Physics, University of Michigan