Nitrogen ions pumped by intense femtosecond laser pulses give rise to optical
amplification in the ultraviolet range. Here, we demonstrated that a seed light
pulse carrying orbital angular momentum (OAM) can be significantly amplified in
nitrogen plasma excited by a Gaussian femtosecond laser pulse. With the
topological charge of +1 and -1, we observed an energy amplification of the
seed light pulse by two orders of magnitude, while the amplified pulse carries
the same OAM as the incident seed pulse. Moreover, we show that a spatial
misalignment of the plasma amplifier with the OAM seed beam leads to an
amplified emission of Gaussian mode without OAM, due to the special spatial
profile of the OAM seed pulse that presents a donut-shaped intensity
distribution. Utilizing this misalignment, we can implement an optical switch
that toggles the output signal between Gaussian mode and OAM mode. This work
not only certifies the phase transfer from the seed light to the amplified
signal, but also highlights the important role of spatial overlap of the
donut-shaped seed beam with the gain region of the nitrogen plasma for the
achievement of OAM beam amplification.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure