Electromagnetic field confinement is crucial for nanophotonic technologies,
since it allows for enhancing light-matter interactions, thus enabling light
manipulation in deep sub-wavelength scales. In the terahertz (THz) spectral
range, radiation confinement is conventionally achieved with specially designed
metallic structures - such as antennas or nanoslits - with large footprints due
to the rather long wavelengths of THz radiation. In this context, phonon
polaritons - light coupled to lattice vibrations - in van der Waals (vdW)
crystals have emerged as a promising solution for controlling light beyond the
diffraction limit, as they feature extreme field confinements and low optical
losses. However, experimental demonstration of nanoscale-confined phonon
polaritons at THz frequencies has so far remained elusive. Here, we provide it
by employing scattering-type scanning near-field optical microscopy (s-SNOM)
combined with a free-electron laser (FEL) to reveal a range of low-loss
polaritonic excitations at frequencies from 8 to 12 THz in the vdW
semiconductor α−MoO3. We visualize THz polaritons with i) in-plane
hyperbolic dispersion, ii) extreme nanoscale field confinement (below
λo/75) and iii) long polariton lifetimes, with a lower limit of > 2
ps