9 research outputs found
Schemes for generation of isolated attosecond pulses of pure circular polarization
We propose and analyze two schemes capable of generating isolated attosecond pulses of pure circular polarization, based on results of numerical simulations. Both schemes utilize the generation of circularly polarized high-order-harmonics by crossing two circularly polarized counter-rotating pulses in a noncollinear geometry. Our results show that in this setup isolation of a single attosecond pulse can be achieved either by restricting the driver pulse duration to a few cycles or by temporally delaying the two crossed driver pulses. We further propose to compensate the temporal walk-off between the pulses across the focal spot and increasing the conversion efficiency by using angular spatial chirp to provide perfectly matched pulse fronts. The isolation of pure circularly polarized attosecond pulses, along with the opportunity to select their central energy and helicity in the noncollinear technique, opens new perspectives from which to study ultrafast dynamics in chiral systems and magnetic materials.The authors acknowledge Luis Plaja for valuable discussions. C.H.-G. acknowledges support from the Marie Curie International Outgoing Fellowship within the EU Seventh Framework Programme for Research and Technological Development (2007–2013), under REA Grant Agreement No. 328334. C.H.-G. and I.J.S. acknowledge support from Junta de Castilla y León (Project SA116U13, UIC016) and MINECO (Grants No. FIS2013-44174-P and No. FIS2015-71933-REDT). A.J.-B. was supported by grants from the U.S. National Science Foundation (Grants No. PHY-1125844 and No. PHY-1068706). D.H. was supported via a grant from the Department of Energy. M.M.M., H.C.K., C.G.D., and A.B. acknowledge support by a MURI grant from Air Force Office of Scientific Research under Award Number FA9550-16-1- 0121. This work utilized the Janus supercomputer, which is supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation (Grant No. CNS-0821794) and the University of Colorado Boulder
Bright Coherent Ultrahigh Harmonics in the keV X-ray Regime from Mid-Infrared Femtosecond Lasers
High-harmonic generation (HHG) traditionally combines ~100 near-infrared laser photons to generate bright, phase-matched, extreme ultraviolet beams when the emission from many atoms adds constructively. Here, we show that by guiding a mid-infrared femtosecond laser in a high-pressure gas, ultrahigh harmonics can be generated, up to orders greater than 5000, that emerge as a bright supercontinuum that spans the entire electromagnetic spectrum from the ultraviolet to more than 1.6 kilo–electron volts, allowing, in principle, the generation of pulses as short as 2.5 attoseconds. The multiatmosphere gas pressures required for bright, phase-matched emission also support laser beam self-confinement, further enhancing the x-ray yield. Finally, the x-ray beam exhibits high spatial coherence, even though at high gas density the recolliding electrons responsible for HHG encounter other atoms during the emission process.The experimental work was funded by a National Security Science and Engineering Faculty Fellowship, and the NSF Center for EUV Science and Technology. A.G., A.J.-B., M.M.M., H.C.K. and A. Becker acknowledge support for theory from the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research (grant no. FA9550-10-1-0561); A. Baltuška acknowledges support from Austrian Science Fund (FWF, grant no. U33-16) and the Austrian Research Promotion Agency (FFG, Project 820831 UPLIT); and C.H.-G. and L.P. acknowledge support from Junta de Castilla y León, Spanish MINECO (CSD2007-00013 and FIS2009-09522), and from Centro de Láseres Pulsados, CLPU. T.P., M.-C.C., A. Bahabad, M.M.M. and H.C.K. have filed for a patent on “Method for phase-matched generation of coherent soft and hard X-rays using IR lasers,” U.S. patent application 61171783 (2008)
Ultraviolet surprise: Efficient soft x-ray high-harmonic generation in multiply ionized plasmas
High-harmonic generation is a universal response of matter to strong femtosecond laser fields, coherently upconverting light to much shorter wavelengths. Optimizing the conversion of laser light into soft x-rays typically demands a trade-off between two competing factors. Because of reduced quantum diffusion of the radiating electron wave function, the emission from each species is highest when a short-wavelength ultraviolet driving laser is used. However, phase matching—the constructive addition of x-ray waves from a large number of atoms—favors longer-wavelength mid-infrared lasers.We identified a regime of high-harmonic generation driven by 40-cycle ultraviolet lasers in waveguides that can generate bright beams in the soft x-ray region of the spectrum, up to photon energies of 280 electron volts. Surprisingly, the high ultraviolet refractive indices of both neutral atoms and ions enabled effective phase matching, even in a multiply ionized plasma.We observed harmonics with very narrow linewidths, while calculations show that the x-rays emerge as nearly time-bandwidth–limited pulse trains of ~100 attoseconds.The experimental work was done at JILA, supported by Army Research Office grant WN11NF-13-1-0259, an NSF PFI AIR award, and U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) grant DE-SC0008803 (M.M.M., T.P., and H.C.K.). Theory was supported by a Marie Curie International Outgoing Fellowship within the EU Seventh Framework Programme for Research and Technological Development (2007–2013) under REA grant agreement 328334 (C.H.-G.); Junta de Castilla y León (SA116U13, UIC016) and MINECO (FIS2013-44174-P) (C.H.-G. and L.P.); NSF grants PHY-1125844 and PHY-1068706 and AFOSR MURI “Mathematical Modeling and Experimental Validation of Ultrafast Light-Matter Coupling associated with Filamentation in Transparent Media” grant FA9550-10-1-0561 (A.J.-B., R.J.L., X.G., A.L.G., M.M.M., and H.C.K.); Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan, grant 102-2112-M-007-025-MY3 (M.-C.C.); U.S. Department of Energy, Division of Chemical Sciences, Atomic, Molecular and Optical Sciences Program (A.B.); and DOE Office of Fusion Energy, HED Laboratory Plasmas program, grant AT5015033 (S.B.L., M.F., and J.A.G.). Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is operated by Lawrence Livermore National Security LLC for DOE, National Nuclear Security Administration, under contract DE-AC52-07NA27344, LLNL-JRNL-676693. T.P., D.P., M.M.M., and H.C.K. have filed a patent on “Generation of VUV, EUV, X-ray Light Using VUV-UV-VIS Lasers,” U.S. patent application 61873794 (2013)/US 20150063385 (2015)
Налоговая оптимизация налога на добавленную стоимость в условиях реформирования налоговой системы Республики Беларусь
Материалы XI Междунар. науч. конф. студентов, аспирантов и молодых ученых, Гомель, 17-18 мая 2018 г
Polarization control of isolated high-harmonic pulses
High-harmonic generation driven by femtosecond lasers makes it possible to capture the fastest dynamics in molecules and materials. However, thus far, the shortest isolated attosecond pulses have only been produced with linear polarization, which limits the range of physics that can be explored. Here, we demonstrate robust polarization control of isolated extreme-ultraviolet pulses by exploiting non-collinear high-harmonic generation driven by two counter-rotating few-cycle laser beams. The circularly polarized supercontinuum is produced at a central photon energy of 33 eV with a transform limit of 190 as and a predicted linear chirp of 330 as. By adjusting the ellipticity of the two counter-rotating driving pulses simultaneously, we control the polarization state of isolated extreme-ultraviolet pulses—from circular through elliptical to linear polarization—without sacrificing conversion efficiency. Access to the purely circularly polarized supercontinuum, combined with full helicity and ellipticity control, paves the way towards attosecond metrology of circular dichroism.The experimental work was carried out at National Tsing Hua University, Institute of Photonics Technologies, supported by the Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan (grants 105-2112-M-007-030-MY3, 105-2112-M-001-030 and 104-2112-M-007-012-MY3). The concept of isolated circularly polarized attosecond pulses was developed by C.H.-G., D.D.H., M.M.M., C.G.D., H.C.K., A.B. and A.J.-B.. C.H.-G. acknowledges support from the Marie Curie International Outgoing Fellowship within the EU Seventh Framework Programme for Research and Technological Development (2007–2013), under Research Executive Agency grant agreement no. 328334. C.H.-G. and L.P. acknowledge support from Junta de Castilla y León (SA046U16) and the Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (FIS2013-44174-P, FIS2016-75652-P). C.H.-G. acknowledges support from a 2017 Leonardo Grant for Researchers and Cultural Creators (BBVA Foundation). M.M.M. and H.C.K. acknowledge support from the Department of Energy Basic Energy Sciences (award no. DE-FG02-99ER14982) for the concepts and experimental set-up. For part of the theory, A.B., A.J.-B., C.G.D., M.M.M. and H.C.K. acknowledge support from a Multidisciplinary University Research Initiatives grant from the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (award no. FA9550-16-1-0121). A.J.-B. also acknowledges support from the US National Science Foundation (grant no. PHY-1734006). This work utilized the Janus supercomputer, which is supported by the US National Science Foundation (grant no. CNS-0821794) and the University of Colorado, Boulder. This research made use of the high-performance computing resources of the Castilla y León Supercomputing Center (SCAYLE, www.scayle.es), financed by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF). J.L.E. acknowledges support from the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship (DGE-1144083). L.R. acknowledges support from the Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte (FPU16/02591)
Recommended from our members
Ultraviolet surprise: Efficient soft x-ray high-harmonic generation in multiply ionized plasmas.
High-harmonic generation is a universal response of matter to strong femtosecond laser fields, coherently upconverting light to much shorter wavelengths. Optimizing the conversion of laser light into soft x-rays typically demands a trade-off between two competing factors. Because of reduced quantum diffusion of the radiating electron wave function, the emission from each species is highest when a short-wavelength ultraviolet driving laser is used. However, phase matching--the constructive addition of x-ray waves from a large number of atoms--favors longer-wavelength mid-infrared lasers. We identified a regime of high-harmonic generation driven by 40-cycle ultraviolet lasers in waveguides that can generate bright beams in the soft x-ray region of the spectrum, up to photon energies of 280 electron volts. Surprisingly, the high ultraviolet refractive indices of both neutral atoms and ions enabled effective phase matching, even in a multiply ionized plasma. We observed harmonics with very narrow linewidths, while calculations show that the x-rays emerge as nearly time-bandwidth-limited pulse trains of ~100 attoseconds
Bright circularly polarized soft X-ray high harmonics for X-ray magnetic circular dichroism
We demonstrate, to our knowledge, the first bright circularly polarized high-harmonic beams in the soft X-ray region of the electromagnetic spectrum, and use them to implement X-ray magnetic circular dichroism measurements in a tabletop-scale setup. Using counterrotating circularly polarized laser fields at 1.3 and 0.79 mu m, we generate circularly polarized harmonics with photon energies exceeding 160 eV. The harmonic spectra emerge as a sequence of closely spaced pairs of left and right circularly polarized peaks, with energies determined by conservation of energy and spin angular momentum. We explain the single-atom and macroscopic physics by identifying the dominant electron quantum trajectories and optimal phase-matching conditions. The first advanced phase-matched propagation simulations for circularly polarized harmonics reveal the influence of the finite phase-matching temporal window on the spectrum, as well as the unique polarization-shaped attosecond pulse train. Finally, we use, to our knowledge, the first tabletop X-ray magnetic circular dichroism measurements at the N-4,N-5 absorption edges of Gd to validate the high degree of circularity, brightness, and stability of this light source. These results demonstrate the feasibility of manipulating the polarization, spectrum, and temporal shape of high harmonics in the soft X-ray region by manipulating the driving laser waveform