Controllable harmonic mode locking and multiple pulsing in a Ti:sapphire laser

Similar documents
Soliton stability conditions in actively modelocked inhomogeneously broadened lasers

Module 4 : Third order nonlinear optical processes. Lecture 24 : Kerr lens modelocking: An application of self focusing

Pulse breaking recovery in fiber lasers

How to build an Er:fiber femtosecond laser

Widely Wavelength-tunable Soliton Generation and Few-cycle Pulse Compression with the Use of Dispersion-decreasing Fiber

FOR A LONG TIME, it was believed that the use of a

Testing with Femtosecond Pulses

Fundamental Optics ULTRAFAST THEORY ( ) = ( ) ( q) FUNDAMENTAL OPTICS. q q = ( A150 Ultrafast Theory

A CW seeded femtosecond optical parametric amplifier

Chad A. Husko 1,, Sylvain Combrié 2, Pierre Colman 2, Jiangjun Zheng 1, Alfredo De Rossi 2, Chee Wei Wong 1,

Designing for Femtosecond Pulses

Yb-doped Mode-locked fiber laser based on NLPR Yan YOU

Optical spectra beyond the amplifier bandwidth limitation in dispersion-managed mode-locked fiber lasers

Dispersion Effects in an Actively Mode-Locked Inhomogeneously Broadened Laser

Passive mode-locking performance with a mixed Nd:Lu 0.5 Gd 0.5 VO 4 crystal

Tunable GHz pulse repetition rate operation in high-power TEM 00 -mode Nd:YLF lasers at 1047 nm and 1053 nm with self mode locking

Generation of High-order Group-velocity-locked Vector Solitons

Femtosecond pulse generation

Continuum White Light Generation. WhiteLase: High Power Ultrabroadband

Ultrafast Optical Physics II (SoSe 2017) Lecture 8, June 2

Observation of Wavelength Tuning and Bound States in Fiber Lasers

TIGER Femtosecond and Picosecond Ti:Sapphire Lasers. Customized systems with SESAM technology*

A 40 GHz, 770 fs regeneratively mode-locked erbium fiber laser operating

PICOSECOND AND FEMTOSECOND Ti:SAPPHIRE LASERS

Optimization of supercontinuum generation in photonic crystal fibers for pulse compression

taccor Optional features Overview Turn-key GHz femtosecond laser

This document is downloaded from DR-NTU, Nanyang Technological University Library, Singapore.

Unidirectional, dual-comb lasing under multiple pulse formation mechanisms in a passively mode-locked fiber ring laser

GENERATION OF FEMTOSECOND PULSED FROM TI:SAPPHIRE OSCILLATOR ABSTRACT INTRODUCTION

Quantum-Well Semiconductor Saturable Absorber Mirror

IEEE JOURNAL OF SELECTED TOPICS IN QUANTUM ELECTRONICS, VOL. 2, NO. 3, SEPTEMBER

First published on: 22 February 2011 PLEASE SCROLL DOWN FOR ARTICLE

Characterization of Chirped volume bragg grating (CVBG)

High energy femtosecond OPA pumped by 1030 nm Nd:KGW laser.

Timing Noise Measurement of High-Repetition-Rate Optical Pulses

Active mode-locking of miniature fiber Fabry-Perot laser (FFPL) in a ring cavity

Generation and evolution of mode-locked noiselike square-wave pulses in a large-anomalousdispersion Er-doped ring fiber laser

Propagation, Dispersion and Measurement of sub-10 fs Pulses

Actively mode-locked Raman fiber laser

A new picosecond Laser pulse generation method.

This document is downloaded from DR-NTU, Nanyang Technological University Library, Singapore.

Characteristics of point-focus Simultaneous Spatial and temporal Focusing (SSTF) as a two-photon excited fluorescence microscopy

Bifurcations and multiple-period soliton pulsations in a passively mode-locked fiber laser

Improving the efficiency of an optical parametric oscillator by tailoring the pump pulse shape

Simultaneous pulse amplification and compression in all-fiber-integrated pre-chirped large-mode-area Er-doped fiber amplifier

Picosecond Pulses for Test & Measurement

Dispersion and Ultrashort Pulses II

Ultrafast second-stokes diamond Raman laser

Soliton Resonances in Dispersion Oscillating Optical Fibers

Supplementary Information for

Mechanism of intrinsic wavelength tuning and sideband asymmetry in a passively mode-locked soliton fiber ring laser

CHAPTER 5 FINE-TUNING OF AN ECDL WITH AN INTRACAVITY LIQUID CRYSTAL ELEMENT

G. Norris* & G. McConnell

Enhanced spectral compression in nonlinear optical

Enhanced bandwidth of supercontinuum generated in microstructured fibers

Dispersion measurement in optical fibres over the entire spectral range from 1.1 mm to 1.7 mm

Optical phase-coherent link between an optical atomic clock. and 1550 nm mode-locked lasers

High-Power, Passively Q-switched Microlaser - Power Amplifier System

All-fiber, all-normal dispersion ytterbium ring oscillator

Generation of 15-nJ pulses from a highly efficient, low-cost. multipass-cavity Cr 3+ :LiCAF laser

Direct observation of two-color pulse dynamics in passively synchronized Er and Yb modelocked

High-Energy 6.2-fs Pulses for Attosecond Pulse Generation

Impact of the Order of Cavity Elements in All-Normal Dispersion Ring Fiber Lasers

Direct diode-pumped Kerr Lens 13 fs Ti:sapphire ultrafast oscillator using a single blue laser diode

Broadband 2.12 GHz Ti:sapphire laser compressed to 5.9 femtoseconds using MIIPS

Design of Highly stable Femto Second Fiber laser in Similariton regime for Optical Communication application

Solitary pulse shaping dynamics in cavity-dumped laser oscillators

Wavelength switching using multicavity semiconductor laser diodes

MODULATION instability (MI) is a typical phenomenon

Dr. Rüdiger Paschotta RP Photonics Consulting GmbH. Competence Area: Fiber Devices

Testing with 40 GHz Laser Sources

Ultra High Speed All Optical Demultiplexing based on Two Photon Absorption. in a Laser Diode. Glasnevin, Dublin 9, IRELAND

Fiber Laser Chirped Pulse Amplifier

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

Theoretical Approach. Why do we need ultra short technology?? INTRODUCTION:

Generation mode-locked square-wave pulse based on reverse. saturable absorption effect in graded index multimode fiber

Solid-State Laser Engineering

High Power and Energy Femtosecond Lasers

Tuning the pulse duration, spectral position and bandwidth of femtosecond pulses by the beam s penetration in an intracavity prism

Enhanced stability of dispersion-managed modelocked fiber lasers with near-zero net cavity dispersion by high-contrast saturable absorbers

Passively Q-switched m intracavity optical parametric oscillator

Institute for Optical Sciences University of Toronto

Novel development of dissipative-soliton-resonance pulses with pump power in an all-normal-dispersion fiber laser

1ps passively mode-locked laser operation of Na,Yb:CaF 2 crystal

Ultrashort Pulse Measurement Using High Sensitivity Two Photon Absorption Waveguide Semiconductor

Multi-wavelength, all-solid-state, continuous wave mode locked picosecond Raman laser

Special 30th Anniversary

All-Optical Signal Processing and Optical Regeneration

Optical solitons in a silicon waveguide

The Realization of Ultra-Short Laser Sources. with Very High Intensity

Synchronization in Chaotic Vertical-Cavity Surface-Emitting Semiconductor Lasers

Single frequency Ti:sapphire laser with continuous frequency-tuning and low intensity noise by means of the additional intracavity nonlinear loss

Generation of µj multicolor femtosecond laser pulses using cascaded four-wave mixing

Spatial distribution clamping of discrete spatial solitons due to three photon absorption in AlGaAs waveguide arrays

Experimental demonstration of both inverted and non-inverted wavelength conversion based on transient cross phase modulation of SOA

Simultaneous measurement of two different-color ultrashort pulses on a single shot

6.1 Thired-order Effects and Stimulated Raman Scattering

Cost-effective wavelength-tunable fiber laser using self-seeding Fabry-Perot laser diode

Elimination of Self-Pulsations in Dual-Clad, Ytterbium-Doped Fiber Lasers

Cross-Phase modulation of laser pulses by strong single-cycle terahertz pulse

Transcription:

Controllable harmonic mode locking and multiple pulsing in a Ti:sapphire laser Xiaohong Han, Jian Wu, and Heping Zeng* State Key Laboratory of Precision Spectroscopy, and Department of Physics, East China Normal University, Shanghai 0006, China * Corresponding author: hpzeng@phy.ecnu.edu.cn Abstract: A new way to control the harmonic mode-locking and multiple pulsing operation with the pulse duration unaffected of a Kerr-lens modelocked Ti:sapphire laser was demonstrated. When the effective nonlinear length of the nonlinear medium which was inserted in the Ti:sapphire laser was varied by changing the position of the medium or the pump power of the laser, stable harmonic mode-locking and multiple-pulse operation were observed. 008 Optical Society of America OCIS codes: (140.0140) Lasers and laser optics; (140.4050) Mode-locked lasers (190.7110) Ultrafast nonlinear optics; (.030) Dispersion; (30.550) Pulse compression. References and links 1. P. Grelu, F. Belhache, F. Gutty, and J. M. Soto-Crespo, Relative phase locking of pulses in a passively mode-locked fiber laser, J. Opt. Soc. Am. B 0, 863 (003).. Ph. Grelu and J. M. Soto-Crespo, Multisoliton states and pulse fragmentation in a passively mode-locked fibre laser, J. Opt. B: Quantum Semiclassical Opt. 6, S71 (004). 3. A. Komarov, H. Leblond, and F. Sanchez, Multistability and hysteresis phenomena in passively modelocked fiber lasers, Phys. Rev. A 71,053809 (005). 4. J. Aus der Au, D. Kopf, F. Morier-Genoud, M. Moser, and U. Keller, -fs pulses from a diode-pumped Nd:glass laser, Opt. Lett., 307 (1997). 5. M. J. Lederer, B. Luther-Davies, H. H. Tan, C. Jagadish, N. N. Akhmediev, and J. M. Soto-Crespo, Multipulse operation of a Ti:sapphire laser mode locked by an ion-implanted semiconductor saturableabsorber mirror, J. Opt. Soc. Am. B 16, 895 (1999). 6. C. Spielmann, P. F. Curley, T. Brabec, and F. Krausz, Ultrabroadband femtosecond lasers, IEEE J. Quantum Electron. 30, 1100 (1994). 7. C. Wang, W. Zhang, K. F. Lee, and K. M. Yoo, Pulse splitting in a self-mode-locked Ti: sapphire laser, Opt. Commun. 137, 89 (1997). 8. B. C. Collings, K. Bergman, and W. H. Knox, True fundamental solitons in a passively mode-locked shortcavity Cr 4+ :YAG laser, Opt. Lett., 1098 (1997). 9. J. H. Lin, W. F. Hsieh, and H. H. Wu, Harmonic mode locking and multiple pulsing in a soft-aperture Kerrlens mode-locked Ti:sapphire laser, Opt. Commun. 1, 149 (00). 10. B. C. Collings, K. Bergman, and W. H. Knox, Stable multigigahertz pulse-train formation in a short-cavity passively harmonic mode-locked erbium/ytterbium fiber laser, Opt. Lett. 3, 13 (1998). 11. D. Y. Tang, L. M. Zhao, B. Zhao, and A. Q. Liu, Mechanism of multisoliton formation and soliton energy quantization in passively mode-locked fiber lasers, Phys. Rev. A 7, 043816 (005). 1. J. Nathan Kutz, B. C. Collings, K. Bergman, and W. H. Knox, Stabilized pulse spacing in soliton lasers due to gain depletionand recovery, IEEE J. Quantum Electron. 34, 1749 (1998). 13. C. J. Zhu, J. F. He, and S. C. Wang, Generation of synchronized femtosecond and picosecond pulses in a dual-wavelength femtosecond Ti:sapphire laser, Opt. Lett. 30, 561 (005). 1. Introduction As an effective way to generate high repetition rate pulsed laser sources, multi-pulse operation based harmonic mode-locking has drawn much attention in both bulk and fiber lasers [1-7]. It was found that third-order harmonic mode-locking pulses could be constructed in a passively mode-locked Cr 4+ :YAG laser [8], and fourth-order harmonic mode-locking pulses were observed in a Kerr-lens mode-locked (KLM) Ti:sapphire laser [9]. With apropos intra-cavity power, up to 11 pulses were obtained in a passively mode-locked erbium/ytterbium fiber laser #919 - $15.00 USD Received Jan 008; revised 18 Feb 008; accepted 8 Feb 008; published 5 Mar 008 (C) 008 OSA 17 March 008 / Vol. 16, No. 6 / OPTICS EXPRESS 3686

[10]. Multi-pulse operation with femtosecond (fs) pulse spacing limited by the pulse duration in an KLM Ti:sapphire laser was reported [7]. Theoretically, Ginzburg-Landau equation taking account of the effect of a bandpass filter was used to simulate the pulse-splitting of a mode-locked Ti:sapphire laser started with a semiconductor saturable-absorber mirror [5]. Peak-power-limiting effect was proved to be responsible for multi-soliton generation in a passively mode-locked fiber laser [11], and the gain depletion and recovery dynamics in the gain medium was successfully used in understanding different pulse spacings in soliton lasers [1]. Here, we performed a further study on the influence of the Kerr effect on multi-pulse operation of the KLM ultrashort lasers, which would be essential for such kind of lasers. In this paper, we experimentally demonstrate that harmonic mode-locking and multi-pulse operation in a KLM Ti:sapphire laser can be controlled by varying the intra-cavity Kerr effect, which is performed by tuning the position of an inserted nonlinear crystal or changing the pump intensity. Moreover, for a stable multi-pulse operation, the value of the intra-cavity net negative dispersion is limited by the Kerr effect. These results allow us a better understanding of the multi-pulse operation of the KLM laser and provide a possible way to control it.. Experiment and results A schematic of the Ti:sapphire laser used in our experiment is shown in Fig. 1. It contains two Brewster-cut Ti:sapphire crystals (Ti:S1 and Ti:S) in two confocal cavities, and Ti:S1 (.5- mm-thick) is used as the gain medium for the laser while Ti:S (5-mm-thick) is used as a nonlinear medium. Three pairs of broadband high-reflection (HR) chirped mirrors (M1-M, M3-M4, and M5-M6), each with an average group velocity dispersion (GVD) of -70 fs, are used to compensate for the positive intra-cavity GVD. M1, M, M5, and M6 are concave mirrors with the same radius of 100 mm, and a 3% output coupler (OC) is used. A pair of fused silica prism (P1 and P) with a separation of 397 mm is inserted in the cavity for additional tunability of the intra-cavity GVD. The total cavity length is about 1875 mm, which corresponds to a round-trip time of 1.5 ns. A commercial autocorrelator and a power meter are used to measure the pulse duration and the average output power, respectively. A sampling oscilloscope and an rf-spectrum analyzer are used to monitor the pulse evolution and its corresponding power-spectrum with the help of a high-speed detector. Fig. 1. Schematic of the Ti:Sapphire laser. Ti:S1 and Ti:S are two Ti:sapphire crystals with.5 mm and 5 mm thickness, respectively. M1-M6 are broadband HR coated chirped mirrors and OC is the output coupler. M1, M, M5 and M6 are concave mirrors with a curvature radius of 100 mm. The fused silica prisms P1 and P supply tunable dispersion. #919 - $15.00 USD Received Jan 008; revised 18 Feb 008; accepted 8 Feb 008; published 5 Mar 008 (C) 008 OSA 17 March 008 / Vol. 16, No. 6 / OPTICS EXPRESS 3687

Output power (mw) Nonlinear length (mm) 50 (a) n=1 n= n=3 n= n=1 00 150 5 4 3 1 0 (b) -4-3 - -1 0 1 3 Z-Z 0 (mm) Fig.. (a). The average output power (solid symbol) and the pulse duration (open symbol) as functions of the position of Ti:S relative to the focus of the confocal cavity, where z is the position of Ti:S while z 0 is the position of the focus, and n is the number of pulses in a roundtrip time. (b) The effective nonlinear length as a function of the position. 40 35 30 5 0 Pulse duration (fs) Fig. 3. Pulse trains and the corresponding rf-spectra observed while varying the position of Ti:S. Normal mode locking (a and d), second harmonic mode-locking (b and e), and triplepulse operation (c and f) are observed. Mode-locking can be achieved readily by pushing one of the prisms quickly as M is tuned to a suitable position. The position of the nonlinear crystal Ti:S can be tuned continuously in a precise way. While translating Ti:S inside the laser cavity, the output average power and pulse duration experience no observable changes. Figure (a) shows the output power, the pulse duration and the number of the pulses observed in a cavity round-trip time as functions of the position of Ti:S relative to the focus of the confocal cavity. Five regions can be found in the figure with different number (n) of pulses in a round-trip time. It shows a strong tendency that the closer the Ti:S to the focus, the more pulses are observed. The asymmetry of Fig. with respect to Z-Z 0 is caused by the asymmetry of the beam waist in the cavity. The pulse train and the corresponding power spectrum are shown in Fig. 3. At certain positions, stable second-order harmonic mode-locking is found and three pulses with unequal nanosecond interpulse spacing are observed. Once the multiple pulses are structured, the harmonic mode-locking where all pulses have an equal interpulse spacing can be well explained by the transient gain depletion and recovery mechanism [1]. Since the gain #919 - $15.00 USD Received Jan 008; revised 18 Feb 008; accepted 8 Feb 008; published 5 Mar 008 (C) 008 OSA 17 March 008 / Vol. 16, No. 6 / OPTICS EXPRESS 3688

recovery time of Ti:sapphire is much longer than the round-trip time, if the n ( n ) pulses in the cavity have an unequal separation, the gain for each pulse will be different. So does the group velocity. Under this situation, after a large number of round trip in the cavity, a stable state of harmonic mode-locking is structured. The timing jitter of a Gaussian pulse can be given by t j = τ XC τ AC, where τ XC and τ AC are the full-width at half-maximums (FWHM) of the cross- and auto-correlation of the laser output pulses, respectively [13]. As shown in Fig. 4(a), the auto- and cross-correlation are measured with a home-made correlator for the second harmonic mode-locked laser pulses. A 0.-mm-thick beta barium borate crystal is used for the sum-frequency generation of two cross-overlapped pulses, and an avalanche photodiode is used for the detection. In the cross-correlation measurement, the time delay is adjusted around 6.15 ns for two adjacent harmonic pulses. The auto- and cross-correlation FWHMs are 40 and 45 fs, indicating a pulse-to-pulse timing jitter of 5 fs for the adjacent harmonic pulses. Meanwhile from the RF spectrum shown in Fig. 4(b), we can find that the cavity fundamental suppression (super-mode suppression) is better than 38 db. Fig. 4. (a). Cross-correlation (green line and symbol) and auto-correlation (magenta line and symbol) measurements when the laser is second harmonic mode-locked. The blue (red) line is the Gaussian simulation of the cross-correlation (auto-correlation) trace. (b) For the second harmonic mode-locking, the RF spectrum shows a supper-mode suppression >38 db. 3. Analysis The dependence of the multi-pulse operation on the position of the nonlinear crystal can be understood as follows. The pulse propagation in the cavity can be described by the nonlinear Schrödinger equation: δu β u i + + γ u u = 0, (1) δz t where u is the electric field envelop, and β is the net intra-cavity GVD. The nonlinear coupling term corresponds to Kerr effect with the coefficient γ = n /( λω ), where n is the nonlinear refraction index of Ti:sapphire, λ is the central wavelength of the carrier envelope, andω is the beam waist. Obviously, as the crystal moves towards to the focus, the beam waist becomes smaller and the Kerr effect becomes stronger. As there are no visible #919 - $15.00 USD Received Jan 008; revised 18 Feb 008; accepted 8 Feb 008; published 5 Mar 008 (C) 008 OSA 17 March 008 / Vol. 16, No. 6 / OPTICS EXPRESS 3689

changes of β (see Fig. ), an intuitional conclusion can be derived that the action of Kerr effect in the crystal should be responsible for the pulse splitting. To be more precise and to reveal the underlying physical mechanism, we take into account the combined effects of Kerr nonlinearity and positive GVD in the medium and also the negative GVD inside the laser cavity. At first, to describe the pulse evolution along the medium, we use a parameter N = L D / L NL to characterize the dispersion effect over Kerr nonlinearity, where L D is the dispersion length related to the pulse duration ( T 0 ) and GVD ( β ) in the medium in the form of L D = T 0 / β, while L NL is the effective nonlinear length related to the peak power P and γ in the form of L NL = 1/ ( γ P). In our experiment, with T 0 = 30 fs, β = 580 fs /cm, 6 4 P = 3.3 10 W with the output power around 30 mw, and γ = 7.5 10 (W m) -1 with ω 10 μm, we get N = 36.8, which means that the Kerr effect plays a dominant role on the pulse evolution along the medium in comparison with the dispersion effect. The Kerr nonlinearities may function as self-phase modulation (SPM) and four-wave mixing between different frequency modes in the frequency domain, self-focusing of the laser beam in the space domain, or self pulse steepening in the time domain. In any cases, the nonlinear interaction can well-described by the nonlinear term in Eq. (1). The self-focusing results in changes of the beam waist and accordingly the peak power, which is comparably small than those caused by the translation of the Ti:S crystal. We thus neglect the spatial changes in our analysis and focus on the pulse changes in the time (frequency) domain for the sake of simplicity. SPM actually plays a dominant role on pulse splitting among all the mentioned Kerr nonlinearities. Four-wave mixing among different frequency modes broadens the pulse spectra and is equivalent to SPM in the frequency domain. Then, taking the intra-cavity net negative GVD into account, the pulse splitting mechanism can be shown as side-lobe pulse generation [7]. Since the SPM provides positive linear frequency chirp at the center of the pulse and negative nonlinear chirp at the edges, when the pulse passes through the prism pair, it splits into three pulses because of the action of negative GVD. But only the two pulses formed from the edges can be sustained and grow into stable double pulses while the pulse from the center with much less energy will disappear. As N is much larger than one in our laser, it is impossible for the central pulse getting enough energy to be sustained, which is different from Ref. [7]. The three-pulse operation here can be explained as the reaction of the pulse splitting operation shown above. Since the two pulses sustained in the cavity can carry different energy, it is comprehensible that the stronger one can split again with the increasing effect of SPM and then stable three pulses can be obtained. Figure 5 shows the dependence of the pulse evolution on the value of N. The arrows show the pulse evolution while Ti:S is translated hereabout the focus orderly. When N is large enough, the pulse in the cavity develops into two pulses suddenly, meanwhile the value of N decreases to the half level because of the intra-cavity energy redistribution. As N keeps on increasing, the two pulses develop into three pulses. The maximum of N appears when Ti:S is in the confocal focus. If we keep on translating Ti:S, N decreases. So does the number of pulses in a round-trip time. Since the dispersion length of the medium keeps constant, the dependence of pulse splitting on the effective nonlinear length related to the Kerr effect is shown clearly. The evolution of the effective nonlinear length while Ti:S is translated can be found in Fig. (b). #919 - $15.00 USD Received Jan 008; revised 18 Feb 008; accepted 8 Feb 008; published 5 Mar 008 (C) 008 OSA 17 March 008 / Vol. 16, No. 6 / OPTICS EXPRESS 3690

3 Number of pulses 1 0 5 10 15 0 5 30 35 40 45 50 55 N Fig. 5. The dependence of the number of pulses in a round-trip time on the value of N. The arrows show the pulse evolution while Ti:S is translated hereabout the confocal focus orderly. Here dash line and circle correspond to the situation that Ti:S moves towards the focus while solid line and square correspond to the opposite. Output power (mw) 95 90 n=1 n= n=3 n=4 85 80 75 70 65 55 4.6 4.8 5.0 5. 5.4 5.6 5.8 Pump power (W) 100 90 80 70 50 40 Pulse duration (fs) Fig. 6. The average output power (solid symbol) and the pulse duration (open symbol) as functions of the pump power, where n is the number of pulses in a round-trip time. Two more experiments are performed to validate the Kerr effect dominant mechanism. Harmonic mode-locking and multiple pulses are found while the pump power or negative GVD is changed. Figure 6 gives the output power, the pulse duration and the number of the pulses observed in a round-trip time as a function of pump power. Depending on the value of n, four regions appear in the figure. While the pump power increases, the peak power inside the crystal increases, which enhances the Kerr effect. So it is not difficult to understand that at certain levels, the side-lobe pulses are generated. Furthermore, when the pump power is above a critical value, the stable mode-locking mechanism is destroyed and a continuous-wave component are found on the spectrum. The number of pulses in a cavity round-trip time decreases while the continuous-wave component increases, which shows the dependence of the pulse splitting on the Kerr effect. It s not surprising that multi-pulse operation exists in a laser cavity when the intra-cavity negative GVD is decreased below a critical value. According to previous reports [5,9], in the #919 - $15.00 USD Received Jan 008; revised 18 Feb 008; accepted 8 Feb 008; published 5 Mar 008 (C) 008 OSA 17 March 008 / Vol. 16, No. 6 / OPTICS EXPRESS 3691

presence of mere negative intra-cavity GVD, the lower the value of β the more pulses could be found. But our experiment results show that pulse splitting happens only when the negative GVD is limited in a certain range. As the negative GVD is varied by changing the insertion width of the second prism P, stable mode-locking in the cavity develops into multipulse operation firstly and then returns to stable mode-locking with single pulse in a roundtrip time at a critical value as the GVD keeps decreasing. Figure 7 shows this tendency clearly. It also shows the output power and pulse duration as functions of the negative GVD. Using the mechanism discussed above, we can find out that the requirement of a certain amount of the GVD is due to the decreasing Kerr effect in the medium caused by the decreasing peak power. When the Kerr effect is below the critical level or even less than the positive GVD, the side-lobe pulse generation can t occur and only stable mode-locking with one pulse can be observed in a round-trip time. Output power (mw) 100 80 40 0 n=1 n= n=1 0-50 -500-480 -4-440 GVD (fs ) 68 64 56 5 Pulse duration (fs) Fig. 7. The average output power (solid symbol) and pulse duration (open symbol) as functions of the net negative intra-cavity GVD where n is the number of pulses. 4. Conclusion In summary, we demonstrate a new way to control harmonic mode-locking and multi-pulse operation of a KLM Ti:sapphire laser. As the effective nonlinear length of the medium intracavity is varied by adjusting the position of the medium or the pump power of the laser, pulse splitting and harmonic mode-locking are observed. A limitation of the net negative GVD caused by the change of the effective nonlinear length is found. These results are explained well by side-lobe pulse generation and transient gain depletion and recovery. Acknowledgments This work was partly supported by National Natural Science Fund (1055416 & 10774045), National Key Project for Basic Research (006CB8005), Program for Changjiang Scholars and Innovative Research Team, Shanghai Science and Technology Commission (06SR0710 & 06JC1405), and Shanghai leading Academic Discipline project (B408). #919 - $15.00 USD Received Jan 008; revised 18 Feb 008; accepted 8 Feb 008; published 5 Mar 008 (C) 008 OSA 17 March 008 / Vol. 16, No. 6 / OPTICS EXPRESS 369