2011
DOI: 10.1063/1.3669783
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Pulsed laser noise analysis and pump-probe signal detection with a data acquisition card

Abstract: A photodiode and data acquisition card whose sampling clock is synchronized to the repetition rate of a laser are used to measure the energy of each laser pulse. Simple analysis of the data yields the noise spectrum from very low frequencies up to half the repetition rate and quantifies the pulse energy distribution. When two photodiodes for balanced detection are used in combination with an optical modulator, the technique is capable of detecting very weak pump-probe signals (ΔI/I(0) ~ 10(-5) at 1 kHz), with … Show more

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Cited by 55 publications
(40 citation statements)
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“…To monitor the light intensity in perpendicular and parallel channels from the Wollaston prism, we recorded the signal simultaneously from two separate photodiodes with the output connected to gated integrators and a data acquisition card/ PC data acquisition system [13]. The pump beam was chopped at half the 1 kHz repetition rate, and the normalized and balanced difference signal was recorded as…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To monitor the light intensity in perpendicular and parallel channels from the Wollaston prism, we recorded the signal simultaneously from two separate photodiodes with the output connected to gated integrators and a data acquisition card/ PC data acquisition system [13]. The pump beam was chopped at half the 1 kHz repetition rate, and the normalized and balanced difference signal was recorded as…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The EO sampling optical beam was variably delayed, attenuated using a half-wave plate and polarizer, directed through a hole in the second THz parabolic reflector, and overlapped with the THz pulse in the GaP crystal. The transmitted EO sampling beam was then passed through a quarter wave plate and polarizing beam splitter, and the signals were detected using balanced photodiodes and analyzed using a National Instruments Data Acquisition card 48 . …”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In these measurements, the local detection time of the picosecond terahertz pulse was synchronized with the pump pulse such that the whole terahertz waveform experienced the same time delay after photoexcitation [29]. To reduce experimental errors due to laser drift, we simultaneously measured the transmitted terahertz electric field waveform E 0 ðtÞ without optical excitation and the optical-pump-induced change of the field ΔE τ ðtÞ via electro-optic sampling using a data acquisition card [16,17,30]. The resulting ratio −ΔE τ =E 0 (referred to as "differential field") approximately represents the PC, Δσ τ;1 (Refs.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%