| Literature DB >> 28761053 |
Oshrat Tchulov1, Matteo Negro2, Salvatore Stagira2, Michele Devetta2, Caterina Vozzi2, Eugene Frumker3.
Abstract
We introduce a novel in-situ strong field ionization tomography approach for characterizing the spatial density distribution of gas jets. We show that for typical intensities in high harmonic generation experiments, the strong field ionization mechanism used in our approach provides an improvement in the resolution close to factor of 2 (resolving about 8 times smaller voxel volume), when compared to linear/single-photon imaging modalities. We find, that while the depth of scan in linear tomography is limited by resolution loss due to the divergence of the driving laser beam, in the proposed approach the depth of focus is localized due to the inherent physical nature of strong-field interaction and discuss implications of these findings. We explore key aspects of the proposed method and compare it with commonly used single- and multi-photon imaging mechanisms. The proposed method will be particularly useful for strong field and attosecond science experiments.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28761053 PMCID: PMC5537280 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-06814-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic of the experimental setup. L-laser; BS-beam splitter; PD-photodiode detector; FL-focusing lens; ID-ion detector; SP-spectrometer; SE-spectrometer slit; G-grating.
Figure 2Strong field ionization (PPT & ADK models) driven by a focused Gaussian beam: (a) PPT (solid blue) and ADK (dashed green) ionization rate profiles generated by a focused Gaussian beam with the intensity profile shown as red dash-dotted curve; (b) The waist diameter as a function of the laser intensity at the focus point (Our experimental working point is indicated by WP); (c) Ionization rate width w (defined at the 1/e 2 of maximum ionization) of PPT and ADK signals along the optic axis, shown together with SHG,THG and the laser beam width. Solid vertical lines show the distance from the focal plane where w increases by factor in analogy with the Rayleigh range (z ); (d) Signal integral across the plane perpendicular to the optical axis under the assumption of constant gas density. Note the variation of the integrated ion signal vs. constant integral of the laser intensity (i.e. power) along the propagation direction.
Comparison between the spatial dependence (in the focal plane) of common imaging modalities and strong field ionization approach.
| Signal type | Transverse variation | Waist radius |
|---|---|---|
| Fluorescence |
|
|
| SHG |
|
|
| THG |
|
|
| PPT |
| 0.5 |
| ADK |
| 0.46 |
The extra factor, g(γ), in the PPT exponential, is a function which gets the value 1 for γ = 0, and decreases monotonically with increasing γ, causing the width of the PPT curve to be somewhat wider than the ADK curve.
Figure 3Experimental results: (a) Typical measured scan along Y axis (shown for X = 0.9 mm below nozzle). (b) Reconstructed normalized mean flow density (ρ (r)) shown across (XY) plane as defined in Fig. 1.