| Literature DB >> 32493931 |
Zan Nie1,2, Chih-Hao Pai3, Jie Zhang1, Xiaonan Ning1, Jianfei Hua4, Yunxiao He1, Yipeng Wu1, Qianqian Su1, Shuang Liu1, Yue Ma1, Zhi Cheng1, Wei Lu5,6, Hsu-Hsin Chu7,8, Jyhpyng Wang9,10,11,12, Chaojie Zhang2, Warren B Mori2, Chan Joshi2.
Abstract
Availability of relativistically intense, single-cycle, tunable infrared sources will open up new areas of relativistic nonlinear optics of plasmas, impulse IR spectroscopy and pump-probe experiments in the molecular fingerprint region. However, generation of such pulses is still a challenge by current methods. Recently, it has been proposed that time dependent refractive index associated with laser-produced nonlinear wakes in a suitably designed plasma density structure rapidly frequency down-converts photons. The longest wavelength photons slip backwards relative to the evolving laser pulse to form a single-cycle pulse within the nearly evacuated wake cavity. This process is called photon deceleration. Here, we demonstrate this scheme for generating high-power (~100 GW), near single-cycle, wavelength tunable (3-20 µm), infrared pulses using an 810 nm drive laser by tuning the density profile of the plasma. We also demonstrate that these pulses can be used to in-situ probe the transient and nonlinear wakes themselves.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32493931 PMCID: PMC7271200 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-16541-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Density profiles, experimental setup, and XFROG results.
a The measured on-axis plasma densities (the blurred curves show the RMS spread of the data) at different blade positions (275, 400, and 525 μm from the edge of the opening) into the gas jet. The resulting plasma density profile has three distinct regions—PC: pulse compressor (black dashed line); IR-CON: IR converter (black dotted line); OC: output coupler (black dash-dot line). b Schematic of the experimental setup. In the IR pulse generation section, the drive laser (red) is focused onto Gas jet 1 (hydrogen) with a movable blade to interact with the plasma structure (see “Methods”). In the IR pulse transport section, the transmitted light from Gas jet 1 is split by a CaF2 wedge into two beams: one is sent after being filtered by an uncoated Ge plate to energy meter for IR energy measurement; the other is filtered (ITOs) and coupled to the XFROG device—Gas jet 2 (argon) followed by a spectrometer. c–e The measured XFROG traces for the corresponding plasma density profiles shown in (a). The black dashed lines mark the position of 405 nm (λref/2). Both four-wave difference-frequency and sum-frequency generated spectra (FWDFG and FWSFG, respectively) can be seen.
Fig. 2Retrieval of the XFROG trace.
a, b Measured and retrieved XFROG traces. The two dashed boxes in (b) are the FWDFG signals generated by MIR (1.5–6 μm) and LWIR (6–20 μm) components, respectively. c, d Retrieved IR temporal and spectral intensity and phase. The intensities are shown on a logarithmic scale. The dashed black line in (d) shows the original spectrum of the 810 nm drive laser. e, f Retrieved LWIR temporal and spectral intensity and phase. The gentle quadratic phase variation shown in (e) and (f) is consistent with a small linear chirp seen in (a).
Fig. 3Wavelength tunability.
The data point with central wavelength of 9.4 μm corresponds to that shown in Fig. 2 and the detailed XFROG data for other four cases are shown in Supplementary Figs. 11–14. The data points for IR energy are averaged over 240 shots. The wavelengths are shown on a logarithmic scale. The horizontal bars represent the wavelength ranges (FWHM) of the accumulated IR energy. The vertical bars represent the standard deviation of IR energy. The solid orange triangles correspond to the estimated normalized vector potential a0. The black dashed line marks the value of a0 = 1.
Fig. 4Comparison of measured and simulated Wigner spectrograms of generated IR pulses.
a, b Wigner spectrograms of measured IR pulses when the blade is at 400 and 525 μm, respectively. The dashed lines represent the upper limit of the measurable IR frequency range due to the optics used to transport the LWIR radiation to the XFROG device. The IR components above 200 THz (λ < 1.5 μm) are filtered out to remove strong residual drive pulse. c, d Simulated Wigner spectrograms of one snapshot of the evolved on-axis laser field and the negative refractive index gradient −∂η/∂ζ (orange line) in the plasma downramp (the OC section) for the cases in (a) and (b), respectively. The local frequency of the photons is downshifted (upshifted) when this negative gradient is negative (positive). e, f The corresponding snapshot of plasma density (wake) and the laser electric field for the cases in (c) and (d), respectively. Strong photon frequency down-shifting occurs at the front of the self-compressed pulse generating a LWIR pulse that recedes by GVD into the first wake cavity (c) and partially leaks into the second wake cavity in the case of (d).