Laser Spectroscopy with Optical Frequency Combs: From Terahertz to Ultraviolet
July 10, 2025
11:00 AM ET / 10:00 AM CT / 8:00 AM PT / 4:00 PM GMT
Duration: 1 hour
Already registered? Click here to log in.
Summary
Optical frequency combs—recognized with the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2005—are laser sources comprising hundreds of thousands of equally spaced spectral lines, serving as ideal “light rulers” for measuring frequency with extreme precision. These powerful tools have revolutionized spectroscopy, enabling applications ranging from fundamental physics tests and trace gas sensing to astronomical observations and the search for life on exoplanets. In this talk, Konstantin Vodopyanov will present recent work on extending frequency combs into both the infrared–terahertz and the visible–ultraviolet spectral regions.
This advancement has enabled measurements of spectral ‘signatures’ of molecules relevant to exobiology, many of which had never been previously explored with such precision. Also, development of frequency combs in the UV range opens the door to studying the recently unveiled ultranarrow optical transition in the 229-Thorium isotope near 148 nm—a potential foundation for a novel type of optical timekeeping device: the nuclear clock.
Speaker