Multi-pulse accumulation of gas molecular coherence enables gigahertz ultrafast frequency conversion

Abstract

Frequency conversion of ultrafast lasers is fundamentally constrained by the trade-off between pulse energy and repetition rate, limiting access to regimes critical for fundamental science and industry. Here, we demonstrate a frequency-conversion mechanism in which molecular coherence accumulates across ultrafast pulse trains in gas-filled hollow-core fibers. Unlike conventional nonlinear interactions initiated by individual high-energy pulses, this mechanism relies on the collective buildup of coherent molecular oscillations driven by successive pulses. Using this mechanism, we achieve Raman frequency conversion at repetition rates up to 3 GHz with nanojoule pulse energies. The results establish a regime of nonlinear optical interaction governed by coherence accumulation of gas molecular oscillations with broad implications for ultrafast laser science and frequency conversion technologies.

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