| Literature DB >> 32004301 |
A V Mitrofanov, D A Sidorov-Biryukov, P B Glek, M V Rozhko, E A Stepanov, A D Shutov, S V Ryabchuk, A A Voronin, A B Fedotov, A M Zheltikov.
Abstract
Coherent-wake plasma emission induced by ultrashort mid-infrared laser pulses on a solid target is shown to give rise to high-brightness, high-order harmonic radiation, offering a promising source of attosecond pulses and a probe for ultrafast subrelativistic plasma dynamics. With 80-fs, 0.2-TW pulses of 3.9-μm radiation used as a driver, optical harmonics up to the 34th order are detected, with their spectra stretching from the mid-infrared region to the extreme ultraviolet region. The harmonic spectrum is found to be highly sensitive to the chirp of the driver. Particle-in-cell analysis of this effect suggests, in agreement with the generic scenario of coherent-wake emission, that optical harmonics are radiated as trains of extremely short, attosecond ultraviolet pulses with a pulse-to-pulse interval varying over the pulse train. A positive chirp of the driver pulse can partially compensate for this variation in the interpulse separation, allowing harmonics of the highest orders to be generated in the plasma emission spectrum.Year: 2020 PMID: 32004301 DOI: 10.1364/OL.45.000750
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Opt Lett ISSN: 0146-9592 Impact factor: 3.776