15,315 research outputs found
Strong Field Ionization Rate for Arbitrary Laser Frequencies
A simple, analytical, nonrelativistic ionization rate formula for atoms and
positive ions in intense ultraviolet and x-ray electromagnetic fields is
derived. The rate is valid at arbitrary values of the Keldysh parameter and
confirmed by results from ab initio numerical solutions of the single active
electron, time-dependent Schroedinger equation. The proposed rate is
particularly relevant for experiments employing the new free electron laser
(FEL) sources under construction worldwide.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, REVTe
Multiple colliding electromagnetic pulses: a way to lower the threshold of pair production from vacuum
The scheme of simultaneous multiple pulse focusing on one spot naturally
arises from the structural features of projected new laser systems, such as ELI
and HiPER. It is shown that the multiple pulse configuration is beneficial for
observing pair production from vacuum under the action of sufficiently
strong electromagnetic fields. The field of the focused pulses is described
using a realistic three-dimensional model based on an exact solution of the
Maxwell equations. The pair production threshold in terms of
electromagnetic field energy can be substantially lowered if, instead of one or
even two colliding pulses, multiple pulses focused on one spot are used. The
multiple pulse interaction geometry gives rise to subwavelength field features
in the focal region. These features result in the production of extremely short
bunches.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Quantum effects with an X-ray free electron laser
A quantum kinetic equation coupled with Maxwell's equation is used to
estimate the laser power required at an XFEL facility to expose intrinsically
quantum effects in the process of QED vacuum decay via spontaneous pair
production. A 9 TW-peak XFEL laser with photon energy 8.3 keV could be
sufficient to initiate particle accumulation and the consequent formation of a
plasma of spontaneously produced pairs. The evolution of the particle number in
the plasma will exhibit non-Markovian aspects of the strong-field pair
production process and the plasma's internal currents will generate an electric
field whose interference with that of the laser leads to plasma oscillations.Comment: 4 pages, LaTeX2
Noncentrosymmetric plasmon modes and giant terahertz photocurrent in a two-dimensional plasmonic crystal
We introduce and theoretically study the plasmon-photogalvanic effect in the
planar noncentrosymmetric plasmonic crystal containing a homogeneous
two-dimensional electron system gated by a periodic metal grating with an
asymmetric unit cell. The plasmon-photogalvanic DC current arises due to the
two-dimensional electron drag by the noncentrosymmetric plasmon modes excited
under normal incidence of terahertz radiation. We show that the collective
plasmon modes of the planar plasmonic crystal become strongly
noncentrosymmetric in the weak coupling regime of their anticrossing. Large
plasmon wavevector (which is typically by two-three orders of magnitude greater
than the terahertz photon wavevector) along with strong near-field enhancement
at the plasmon resonance make the plasmonic drag a much stronger effect
compared to the photon drag observed in conventional two-dimensional electron
systems.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures, submitted to Physical Review
Band-aid for information loss from black holes
We summarize, simplify and extend recent work showing that small deviations
from exact thermality in Hawking radiation, first uncovered by Kraus and
Wilczek, have the capacity to carry off the maximum information content of a
black hole. This goes a considerable way toward resolving a long-standing
"information-loss paradox"
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