FAST Lab Tour

Come on inside

...but don't forget to wear your safety goggles! The FAST lab contains high power lasers that can produce pulses from infrared to ultraviolet. This can be very dangerous for the eyes, even if beams are only viewed indirectly. Direct exposure to the beams themselves can also damage skin.

The FAST lab is unique within the ORC, in that the facilities are a central resource rather than attached to a specific group. This means that the exact setup of the equipment and the experiments taking place vary considerably.

The floorplan of the lab, however, is relatively unchanging. This is because 2 tonnes of optical table is not easily moved! These heavy tables significantly reduce the vibrations transmitted to the experiments. This is very important when experiments can be looking at something around 20nm in size; just a few molecules. Camera-shake can be a bit of a problem!

The Laser System


50GW put in Perspective

50 Gigawatts is very high power, equivalent to more than 30 nuclear power stations. The entire capactiy of the national grid for the UK is around 70GW.

The laser system has wavelength coverage from 230nm (ultraviolet) to 10µm (infrared) with pulse energies up to 2.5mJ. Because this 2.5mJ is contained in such a short pulse, the peak power approaches 50 Gigawatts.

2.5mJ is not a lot of energy, but confined to a small time and space it is enough to do very unusual things to matter. These unusual behaviours is what we study, to push the boundaries of our understanding of physics, chemistry and biology, and develop new technology out of that understanding.

Detectors and Diagnostics



No laboratory would be complete without a full range of diagnostic and detection equipment, and the FAST lab is no exception. There are power meters to cover all parameters. Autocorrelation and spectrometers both currently cover the range 235nm to 2.6µm.

The FAST Biolab


Attached to the main laboratory is a 'clean' biolab. Laser pulses can be routed through to  an optical table in this area for biophotonics experiments. The lab includes a Heraeus Class II Cabinet and Heraeus CO2 Incubator.

There is also a fridge, freezer and dishwasher, making this area an ideal home for today's physicist/biologist/chemist on the go.

Ultrafast Research

The ORC's interest in femtosecond science covers many areas including nonlinear optical phenomena, materials science, biophotonics and nano-technology. This covers a wide area, several of the ORC's research groups, and collaborative projects with several other disciplines.

SNOM


We are currently developing experiments designed to combine the high spatial resolution of Scanning Near-Feild Optical Microscopy (SNOM) with the ultrafast time-scales given by femtosecond pulses. The image on the left is the tuning-fork/optical probe based system we have assembled.

Micromachining workstation


This commercial micromachining workstation has computer controlled energy delivery and focusing of laser pulses. It is suitable for both surface ablation and waveguide writing within samples.

Vacuum Chamber


The vacuum chamber/femtosecond pulse system is being utilised to develop various materials science experiments.

Copyright University of Southampton 2006