14,456 research outputs found
Generation of isolated attosecond pulses in the far field by spatial filtering with an intense few-cycle mid-infrared laser
We report theoretical calculations of high-order harmonic generation (HHG) of
Xe with the inclusion of multi-electron effects and macroscopic propagation of
the fundamental and harmonic fields in an ionizing medium. By using the
time-frequency analysis we show that the reshaping of the fundamental laser
field is responsible for the continuum structure in the HHG spectra. We further
suggest a method for obtaining an isolated attosecond pulse (IAP) by using a
filter centered on axis to select the harmonics in the far field with different
divergence. We also discuss the carrier-envelope-phase dependence of an IAP and
the possibility to optimize the yield of the IAP. With the intense few-cycle
mid-infrared lasers, this offers a possible method for generating isolated
attosecond pulses.Comment: 8 figure
Analysis of effects of macroscopic propagation and multiple molecular orbitals on the minimum in high-order harmonic generation of aligned CO
We report theoretical calculations on the effect of the multiple orbital
contribution in high-order harmonic generation (HHG) from aligned CO with
inclusion of macroscopic propagation of harmonic fields in the medium. Our
results show very good agreements with recent experiments for the dynamics of
the minimum in HHG spectra as laser intensity or alignment angle changes.
Calculations are carried out to check how the position of the minimum in HHG
spectra depends on the degrees of molecular alignment, laser focusing
conditions, and the effects of alignment-dependent ionization rates of the
different molecular orbitals. These analyses help to explain why the minima
observed in different experiments may vary.Comment: 7 figure
Spatially coherent high-order harmonics generated at optimal high gas pressure with high-intensity one- or two-color laser pulses
Citation: Jin, C., & Lin, C. D. (2016). Spatially coherent high-order harmonics generated at optimal high gas pressure with high-intensity one- or two-color laser pulses. Physical Review A, 94(4), 6. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.94.043804We investigate the gas-pressure dependence of macroscopic harmonic spectra generated in a high-ionization medium using intense 800-nm laser pulses. The harmonics obtained at the optimal pressure show good spatial coherence with small divergence (less than 2 mrad) in the far field. By analyzing the evolution of the laser's electric field as it propagates, we find that dynamic phase matching conditions are fulfilled in the second half of the gas cell and that harmonic yields do not depend on the position of the gas cell with respect to the focusing position. We also demonstrate that harmonic yields at the optimal pressure can be further enhanced by increasing input laser energy or by adding a few percent of second or third harmonic to the fundamental
BCS-BEC crossover in a relativistic boson-fermion model beyond mean field approximation
We investigate the fluctuation effect of the di-fermion field in the
crossover from Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) pairing to a Bose-Einstein
condensate (BEC) in a relativistic superfluid. We work within the boson-fermion
model obeying a global U(1) symmetry. To go beyond the mean field approximation
we use Cornwall-Jackiw-Tomboulis (CJT) formalism to include higher order
contributions. The quantum fluctuations of the pairing condensate is provided
by bosons in non-zero modes, whose interaction with fermions gives the
two-particle-irreducible (2PI) effective potential. It changes the crossover
property in the BEC regime. With the fluctuations the superfluid phase
transition becomes the first order in grand canonical ensemble. We calculate
the condensate, the critical temperature and particle abundances as
functions of crossover parameter the boson mass.Comment: The model Lagrangian is re-formulated by decomposing the complex
scalar field into its real and imaginary parts. The anomalous propagators of
the complex scalar are then included at tree level. All numerical results are
updated. ReVTex 4, 13 pages, 10 figures, PRD accepted versio
Optimal generation of spatially coherent soft X-ray isolated attosecond pulses in a gas-filled waveguide using two-color synthesized laser pulses
We numerically demonstrate the generation of intense, low-divergence soft X-ray isolated attosecond pulses in a gas-filled hollow waveguide using synthesized few-cycle two-color laser waveforms. The waveform is a superposition of a fundamental and its second harmonic optimized such that highest harmonic yields are emitted from each atom. We then optimize the gas pressure and the length and radius of the waveguide such that bright coherent high-order harmonics with angular divergence smaller than 1 mrad are generated, for photon energy from the extreme ultraviolet to soft X-rays. By selecting a proper spectral range enhanced isolated attosecond pulses are generated. We study how dynamic phase matching caused by the interplay among waveguide mode, neutral atomic dispersion, and plasma effect is achieved at the optimal macroscopic conditions, by performing time-frequency analysis and by analyzing the evolution of the driving laser’s electric field during the propagation. Our results, when combined with the on-going push of high-repetition-rate lasers (sub- to few MHz’s) may eventually lead to the generation of high-flux, low-divergence soft X-ray tabletop isolated attosecond pulses for applications.Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities of China (Grant No. 30916011207)United States. Department of Energy. Office of Science (Grant No. DE-FG02-86ER13491)United States. Air Force Office of Scientific Research (Grant No. FA9550- 14-1-0255
Analysis of Effects of Macroscopic Propagation and Multiple Molecular Orbitals on the Minimum in High-Order Harmonic Generation of Aligned COâ‚‚
We report theoretical calculations of the effect of the multiple-orbital contribution in high-order harmonic generation (HHG) of aligned COâ‚‚ with the inclusion of macroscopic propagation of harmonic fields in the medium. Our results show very good agreement with recent experiments for the dynamics of the minimum in HHG spectra as laser intensity or alignment angle changes. Calculations are carried out to check how the position of the minimum in HHG spectra depends on the degrees of molecular alignment, laser-focusing conditions, and the effects of alignment-dependent ionization rates of the different molecular orbitals. These analyses help to explain why the minima observed in different experiments may vary
Retrieval of Target Photorecombination Cross Sections from High-Order Harmonics Generated in a Macroscopic Medium
We investigate high-order harmonic generation (HHG) in a thin macroscopic medium by solving Maxwell\u27s equation using microscopic single-atom induced dipole moment calculated from the recently developed quantitative rescattering (QRS) theory. We show that macroscopic HHG yields calculated from QRS compared well with those obtained from solving the single-atom time-dependent Schrödinger equation but with great saving of computer time. We also show that macroscopic HHG can be expressed as a product of a macroscopic wave packet and the photorecombination cross section of the target gas. The latter enables us to extract target structure from the experimentally measured HHG spectra, thus paves the way to use few-cycle infrared lasers for time-resolved chemical imaging of transient molecules with few-femtosecond temporal resolution
Medium Propagation Effects in High-Order Harmonic Generation of Ar and Nâ‚‚
We report theoretical calculations of high-order harmonic generation (HHG) by intense infrared lasers in atomic and molecular targets taking into account the macroscopic propagation of both fundamental and harmonic fields. On the examples of Ar and Nâ‚‚, we demonstrate that these ab initio calculations are capable of accurately reproducing available experimental results with isotropic and aligned target media. We further present detailed analysis of HHG intensity and phase under various experimental conditions, in particular, as the wavelength of the driving laser changes. Most importantly, our results strongly support the factorization of HHG at the macroscopic level into a product of a returning electron wave packet and the photorecombination transition dipole under typical experimental conditions. This implies that the single-atom or single-molecule structure information can be retrieved from experimentally measured HHG spectra
Electrodynamics of Media
Contains reports on three research projects.Joint Services Electronics Program (Contract DAAB07-75-C-1346
Generation of broad XUV continuous high harmonic spectra and isolated attosecond pulses with intense mid-infrared lasers
We present experimental results showing the appearance of a near-continuum in
the high-order harmonic generation (HHG) spectra of atomic and molecular
species as the driving laser intensity of an infrared pulse increases. Detailed
macroscopic simulations reveal that these near-continuum spectra are capable of
producing IAPs in the far field if a proper spatial filter is applied. Further,
our simulations show that the near-continuum spectra and the IAPs are a product
of strong temporal and spatial reshaping (blue shift and defocusing) of the
driving field. This offers a possibility of producing IAPs with a broad range
of photon energy, including plateau harmonics, by mid-IR laser pulses even
without carrier-envelope phase stabilization.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, submitted to J.Phys. B (Oct 2011
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