fisico30 said:
Take a laser source with small bandwidth centered around the average frequency (or wavelength)
With an hypothetical external modulator that can switch as fast as we want, ca we make a pulse that is spatially shorter than 1 wavelength?
If not? Why? What would that entail?
Clearly the number of photons always need to be an integer in whatever pulse we have, right?
I'm late to this thread, but I don't think the OP's question ever got answered.
Sentence two potentially mixes up two concepts- the temporal extent of a pulse and the spatial confinement of a pulse. It's possible to define a pulse duration as the product of group velocity and center frequency (
http://www.rp-photonics.com/pulse_duration.html), but that's usually not what is meant by spatial confinement- focusing is. And photon number doesn't really enter into any of this- these are bright pulses, not dim pulses.
Assuming the OP was not asking about spatial widths, the spatial extent of a wavefront is also related to certain source characteristics via a Fourier transform- it's spatial rather than temporal, but the concept is the same. Essentially, the Fourier transform of the source gives the so-called 'point spread function'. Technically, it's the spatial Fourier transform of the exit pupil of an optical system, but basically, larger sources give smaller focal volumes. That's why microscope lenses have high numerical apertures- a high NA gives a small focal volume. The Rayleigh limit- something usually associated with resolution limits- is actually a measure of the Fourier transform of a disk function- lenses are typically disk-shaped. The minimum spot size is about wavelength/NA, but there's tricks to get very small focal volumes in, for example, nonlinear optics.
So, the limit of spatial confinement of a pulse depends on spectral badwidth indirectly. First, the wavelength comes into the Fourier transform as a scale factor, but more critically, the construction of lenses to minimize the chromatic aberrations over a large bandwidth is very difficult, and why microscopy using pulsed sources is so tricky.
Now spectral bandwidth- as others have posted, the spectral bandwidth and pulse duration are related by a Fourier transform, and there are some simple transform pairs (Gassian/Gaussian and sech^2/?) that have a minimum product, and are useful metrics to compare real pulses against. The fastest pulses I know of are tens of attoseconds long with a center frequency in the x-ray and created by harmonic generation of UV pulses. A 10 as pulse has a large spectral bandwidth and lasts about 1/100 of an optical cycle.
Narrowband sources make poor pulsed sources- pulsed sources usually have a dispersive element in order to broaden the initial pulse and allow for compression.