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Sculpting sub-cycle temporal structures of optical waveforms allows one to image and even control electronic clouds in atoms, molecules and solids. Here we show how the transverse spin component arising upon spatial confinement of such optical waveforms enables extremely efficient chiral recognition and control of ultrafast chiral dynamics. When an intense few-cycle, linearly polarized laser pulse is tightly focused into a medium of randomly oriented chiral molecules, the medium generates light which is elliptically polarized, with opposite helicities and opposite rotations of the polarization ellipse in media of opposite handedness. In contrast to conventional optical activity of chiral media, this new nonlinear optical activity is driven by purely electric-dipole interactions and leads to giant enantio-sensitivity in the near VIS-UV domain, where optical instrumentation is readily available. Adding a polarizer turns rotation of the polarization ellipse into highly enantio-sensitive intensity of the nonlinear-optical response. Sub-cycle optical control of the incident light wave enables full control over the enantio-sensitive response. The proposed all-optical method not only enables extremely efficient chiral discrimination, but also ultrafast imaging and control of chiral dynamics with commercially available optical technology.
We describe an ultrafast time resolved pump-probe spectroscopy setup aimed at studying the switching of nanophotonic structures. Both fs pump and probe pulses can be independently tuned over broad frequency range between 3850 and 21050 cm$^{-1}$. A b
Construction and characterization of a multichannel photodiode detector based on commercially available components with high signal to noise of $sim10^{6}$ and a rapid frame rate, suitable for time resolved femtosecond spectroscopy with high repetition femtosecond sources, is presented.
We developed planar multilayered photonic-plasmonic structures, which support topologically protected optical states on the interface between metal and dielectric materials, known as optical Tamm states. Coupling of incident light to the Tamm states
We demonstrate optical frequency comb Faraday rotation spectroscopy (OFC-FRS) for broadband interference-free detection of paramagnetic species. The system is based on a femtosecond doubly resonant optical parametric oscillator and a fast-scanning Fo
The coupling of laser light to matter can exert sub-cycle coherent control over material properties, with optically induced currents and magnetism shown to be controllable on ultrafast femtosecond time scales. Here, by employing laser light consistin