Femtosecond
Femtosecond (fs) is a unit of time equal to 10^-15 seconds. It is used to describe events that unfold on ultrafast timescales, many orders of magnitude shorter than typical chemical reaction times. Light travels about 0.3 micrometers in one femtosecond, so a femtosecond pulse may occupy a fraction of a micron in space.
Femtosecond pulses are typically produced by mode-locked lasers and can be stretched and amplified using chirped
Applications span fundamental science and technology. In chemistry and physics, femtosecond spectroscopy and pump–probe experiments reveal
Characterization of femtosecond pulses employs autocorrelation, frequency-resolved optical gating (FROG), spectral phase interferometry (SPIDER), and related