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Ryuji Morita

Other affiliations: École Normale Supérieure
Bio: Ryuji Morita is an academic researcher from Hokkaido University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Optical vortex & Bandwidth-limited pulse. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 172 publications receiving 2438 citations. Previous affiliations of Ryuji Morita include École Normale Supérieure.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is discovered for the first time that light can twist metal to control the chirality of metal nanostructures (hereafter, chiral metal nanoneedles), which will enable us to selectively distinguish the chiral and optical activity of molecules and chemical composites on a nanoscale.
Abstract: We discovered for the first time that light can twist metal to control the chirality of metal nanostructures (hereafter, chiral metal nanoneedles). The helicity of optical vortices is transferred to the constituent elements of the irradiated material (mostly melted material), resulting in the formation of chiral metal nanoneedles. The chirality of these nanoneedles could be controlled by just changing the sign of the helicity of the optical vortex. The tip curvature of these chiral nanoneedles was measured to be <40 nm, which is less than 1/25th of the laser wavelength (1064 nm). Such chiral metal nanoneedles will enable us to selectively distinguish the chirality and optical activity of molecules and chemical composites on a nanoscale and they will provide chiral selectivity for nanoscale imaging systems (e.g., atomic force microscopes), chemical reactions on plasmonic nanostructures, and planar metamaterials.

409 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is discovered that chiral nanoneedles fabricated by vortex laser ablation can be used to visualize the helicity of an optical vortex and it is found that optical vortices with the same total angular momentum are degenerate, and they generate nan oneedles with theSame chirality and spiral frequency.
Abstract: We discovered that chiral nanoneedles fabricated by vortex laser ablation can be used to visualize the helicity of an optical vortex. The orbital angular momentum of light determines the chirality of the nanoneedles, since it is transferred from the optical vortex to the metal. Only the spin angular momentum of the optical vortex can reinforce the helical structure of the created chiral nanoneedles. We also found that optical vortices with the same total angular momentum (defined as the sum of the orbital and spin angular momenta) are degenerate, and they generate nanoneedles with the same chirality and spiral frequency.

268 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Microneedle fabrication on a metal surface based on laser ablation using twisted light with spin was demonstrated, for the first time, and the resulting needle showed a height of at least 10 microm above the target surface and a tip diameter of less than 0.3 microm.
Abstract: Microneedle fabrication on a metal surface based on laser ablation using twisted light with spin was demonstrated, for the first time. The resulting needle showed a height of at least 10 μm above the target surface and a tip diameter of less than 0.3 μm. We also demonstrated the fabrication of a two-dimensional 5 × 6 microneedle array. The needles were uniformly well shaped with an average length and tip diameter of about 10 and 0.5 μm, respectively.

223 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It was suggested that owing to orbital angular momentum of optical vortex, clearer and smoother processed surfaces were obtained with less ablation threshold fluence, in comparison with the ablation by a nonvortex annular beam modified from a spatially Gaussian beam.
Abstract: Laser ablation of Ta plates using nanosecond optical vortex pulses was carried out, for the first time. It was suggested that owing to orbital angular momentum of optical vortex, clearer and smoother processed surfaces were obtained with less ablation threshold fluence, in comparison with the ablation by a nonvortex annular beam modified from a spatially Gaussian beam.

210 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A feedback system combined with only one 4-f phase compensator with a spatial light modulator and a significantly improved phase characterizer based on modified spectral phase interferometry for direct electric-field reconstruction produces the shortest pulse in the visible-to-infrared region.
Abstract: We compensated for chirp of optical pulses with an over-one-octave bandwidth (495-1090 nm; center wavelength of 655.4 nm) produced by self-phase modulation in a single argon-filled hollow fiber and generated 3.4-fs, 1.56 optical-cycle pulses (500 nJ, 1-kHz repetition rate). This was achieved with a feedback system combined with only one 4-f phase compensator with a spatial light modulator and a significantly improved phase characterizer based on modified spectral phase interferometry for direct electric-field reconstruction. To the best of our knowledge, this is the shortest pulse in the visible-to-infrared region.

173 citations


Cited by
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Journal Article
TL;DR: In this article, a fast Fourier transform method of topography and interferometry is proposed to discriminate between elevation and depression of the object or wave-front form, which has not been possible by the fringe-contour generation techniques.
Abstract: A fast-Fourier-transform method of topography and interferometry is proposed. By computer processing of a noncontour type of fringe pattern, automatic discrimination is achieved between elevation and depression of the object or wave-front form, which has not been possible by the fringe-contour-generation techniques. The method has advantages over moire topography and conventional fringe-contour interferometry in both accuracy and sensitivity. Unlike fringe-scanning techniques, the method is easy to apply because it uses no moving components.

3,742 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
04 Oct 2006
TL;DR: In this paper, a review of numerical and experimental studies of supercontinuum generation in photonic crystal fiber is presented over the full range of experimentally reported parameters, from the femtosecond to the continuous-wave regime.
Abstract: A topical review of numerical and experimental studies of supercontinuum generation in photonic crystal fiber is presented over the full range of experimentally reported parameters, from the femtosecond to the continuous-wave regime. Results from numerical simulations are used to discuss the temporal and spectral characteristics of the supercontinuum, and to interpret the physics of the underlying spectral broadening processes. Particular attention is given to the case of supercontinuum generation seeded by femtosecond pulses in the anomalous group velocity dispersion regime of photonic crystal fiber, where the processes of soliton fission, stimulated Raman scattering, and dispersive wave generation are reviewed in detail. The corresponding intensity and phase stability properties of the supercontinuum spectra generated under different conditions are also discussed.

3,361 citations

Proceedings Article
Ferenc Krausz1
01 Aug 2007
TL;DR: In this paper, an attosecond "oscilloscope" was used to visualize the oscillating electric field of visible light with an oscillator and probe multi-electron dynamics in atoms, molecules and solids.
Abstract: Summary form only given. Fundamental processes in atoms, molecules, as well as condensed matter are triggered or mediated by the motion of electrons inside or between atoms. Electronic dynamics on atomic length scales tends to unfold within tens to thousands of attoseconds (1 attosecond [as] = 10-18 s). Recent breakthroughs in laser science are now opening the door to watching and controlling these hitherto inaccessible microscopic dynamics. The key to accessing the attosecond time domain is the control of the electric field of (visible) light, which varies its strength and direction within less than a femtosecond (1 femtosecond = 1000 attoseconds). Atoms exposed to a few oscillations cycles of intense laser light are able to emit a single extreme ultraviolet (XUV) burst lasting less than one femtosecond. Full control of the evolution of the electromagnetic field in laser pulses comprising a few wave cycles have recently allowed the reproducible generation and measurement of isolated sub-femtosecond XUV pulses, demonstrating the control of microscopic processes (electron motion and photon emission) on an attosecond time scale. These tools have enabled us to visualize the oscillating electric field of visible light with an attosecond "oscilloscope", to control single-electron and probe multi-electron dynamics in atoms, molecules and solids. Recent experiments hold promise for the development of an attosecond X-ray source, which may pave the way towards 4D electron imaging with sub-atomic resolution in space and time.

1,618 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Building off a strong technology base and multiple demonstrations of successful drug delivery, microneedles are poised to advance further into clinical practice to enable better pharmaceutical therapies, vaccination and other applications.

1,271 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The nature and dynamics of the singlet excited electronic states created in nucleic acids and their constituents by UV light are reviewed, finding that these states are highly stable to photochemical decay, perhaps as a result of selection pressure during a long period of molecular evolution.
Abstract: The scope of this review is the nature and dynamics of the singlet excited electronic states created in nucleic acids and their constituents by UV light. Interest in the UV photochemistry of nucleic acids has long been the motivation for photophysical studies of the excited states, because these states are at the beginning of the complex chain of events that culminates in photodamage. UV-induced damage to DNA has profound biological consequences, including photocarcinogenesis, a growing human health problem.1-3 Sunlight, which is essential for life on earth, contains significant amounts of harmful UV (λ < 400 nm) radiation. These solar UV photons constitute one of the most ubiquitous and potent environmental carcinogens. This extraterrestrial threat is impressive for its long history; photodamage is as old as life itself. The genomic information encoded by these biopolymers has been under photochemical attack for billions of years. It is not surprising then that the excited states of the nucleic acid bases (see Chart 1), the most important UV chromophores of nucleic acids, are highly stable to photochemical decay, perhaps as a result of selection pressure during a long period of molecular evolution. This photostability is due to remarkably rapid decay pathways for electronic energy, which are only now coming into focus through femtosecond laser spectroscopy. The recently completed map of the human genome and the ever-expanding crystallographic database of nucleic acid structures are two examples that illustrate the richly detailed information currently available about the static properties of nucleic acids. In contrast, much less is known about the dynamics of these macromolecules. This is particularly true of the dynamics of the excited states that play a critical role in DNA photodamage. Efforts to study nucleic acids by time-resolved spectroscopy have been stymied by the apparent lack of suitable fluorophores. In contrast, dynamical spectroscopy of proteins has flourished thanks to intrinsically fluorescent amino acids such as tryptophan, tyrosine, and phenylalanine.4 The primary UVabsorbing constituents of nucleic acids, the nucleic acid bases, have vanishingly small fluorescence quantum yields under physiological conditions of temperature and pH.5 In fact, the bases were frequently described as “nonfluorescent” in the early literature. * To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: kohler@ chemistry.ohio-state.edu. Phone: (614) 688-3944. Fax: (614) 2921685. 1977 Chem. Rev. 2004, 104, 1977−2019

1,115 citations