We present a stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) microscope integrated with a novel fiber-based light source. Our light source provides two synchronized pulse trains with 100 mW average power each, independently tunable in the range of 913 to 930 nm and 1024 to 1034 nm, respectively, thus enabling SRS measurements across the 990 to 1300 cm-1 spectral range with a spectral resolution of 15 cm-1. We demonstrate the SRS imaging of leukemic cells recorded in a few seconds. Our system may find potential application in biomedicine, in particular, helping to accelerate the diagnostics and follow-up treatment of leukemia patients.
Chirped fiber Bragg gratings opened up a way towards investigating dispersion-managed dissipative soliton regime in all-fiber cavities at the wavelength of 1 µm. It has been shown that dispersion management can decrease the chirped pulse duration compared to all-normal-dispersion oscillators. Recent works also prove that operation near-zero net cavity dispersion can reduce the relative intensity noise. Building such systems using only polarization-maintaining optical fibers is of great interest because of their robustness in extreme environmental conditions resulting in various applications outside research laboratories. This work presents an ultrafast Ybdoped fiber laser oscillator made entirely of polarization-maintaining optical fibers and fiberized components. Unlike in typical ring cavities, the ultrashort pulse passes through the rare-earth-doped fiber twice per cavity roundtrip. The system operates in a Raman-free dispersion-managed dissipative soliton regime at the central wavelength of 1031 nm. The negative dispersion is introduced to the cavity via a chirped fiber Bragg grating. At net cavity dispersion of –0.037 ps2, the setup delivers stable 3 nJ pulses at a repetition rate of 23.781 MHz. The oscillator, passively mode-locked with a nonlinear optical loop mirror, generates positively chirped 8.2 ps pulses, which can be compressed down to 125 fs with a temporal Strehl ratio of 0.77.
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