Phys. Rev. X 6, 031037 (2016)https://ireap.umd.edu/10.1103/PhysRevX.6.0310372016
Nihal Jhajj Ilia Larkin Eric W. Rosenthal Sina Zahedpour Jared K. Wahlstrand Howard M. Milchberg
Journal ArticlePlasma, Accelerator, and Nuclear Physics

We present the first experimental evidence, supported by theory and simulation, of spatiotemporal optical vortices (STOVs). A STOV is an optical vortex with phase and energy circulation in a spatiotemporal plane. Depending on the sign of the material dispersion, the local electromagnetic energy flow is saddle or spiral about the STOV. STOVs are a fundamental element of the nonlinear collapse and subsequent propagation of short optical pulses in material media, and conserve topological charge, constraining their birth, evolution, and annihilation. We measure a self-generated STOV consisting of a ring-shaped null in the electromagnetic field about which the phase is spiral, forming a dynamic torus that is concentric with and tracks the propagating pulse. Our results, here obtained for optical pulse collapse and filamentation in air, are generalizable to a broad class of nonlinearly propagating waves.


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