2005 36th Meeting of the Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
Tuesday–Saturday, May 17–21, 2005;
Lincoln, Nebraska
Session G1: Thesis Prize Session
1:30 PM–3:54 PM,
Thursday, May 19, 2005
Burnham Yates Conference Center
Room: Ballroom I
Chair: Brett Esry, Kansas State University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.DAMOP.G1.3
Abstract: G1.00003 : Quasi-Phase Matching of Soft X-Ray Light from High-Order Harmonic Generation Using Waveguide Structures
2:42 PM–3:18 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Emily Gibson
(JILA, University of Colorado)
In this work, we experimentally demonstrate enhanced
conversion efficiency for high harmonic generation in neon gas
at the carbon edge (284 eV), and report the first
observation of high harmonic generation from argon up to $\sim$
250 eV.
High-order harmonic generation (HHG) in gases is a
useful source of coherent light in the extreme ultraviolet to
soft x-ray regions of the spectrum. Phase matching
of the HHG conversion process can be obtained in a gas filled
hollow-core waveguide by adjusting the gas pressure to balance
the effect on the phase velocity of the light due to the
dispersion
of the plasma, waveguide and neutral
gas.\footnote{A. Rundquist, Science 280, 1412
(1998).}
Unfortunately, at still relatively low ionization levels ($\sim
5 \%$), the
plasma contribution to the phase velocity becomes much greater
than the neutral gas contribution, making simple
phase matching impossible for higher laser intensities, and
therefore higher harmonic energies.
In previous work,\footnote{I. P. Christov, Optics
Express 7, 362 (2000).}
\footnote{A. Paul, Nature 421, 51 (2003).} we demonstrated that
by modulating
the
diameter of the hollow waveguide, we could quasi-phase
match (QPM) the HHG conversion process. The effect of the
modulations is to periodically modulate the driving
laser intensity. Because the phase of the harmonic emission
depends on the driving laser intensity, the
modulations can both phase modulate the harmonic light, and
suppress
the harmonic generation in certain regions of the
waveguide. Here,\footnote{E. A. Gibson, Science 302, 95
(2003).}
\footnote{E. A. Gibson, Physical Review Letters 92, 033001
(2004).} we dramatically demonstrate the
effect of quasi-phase matching of HHG in nearly
fully-ionized gases. As a result of QPM, we observe harmonic
emission at the carbon absorption edge (284 eV) in
neon. Using argon gas, we observe HHG up to 250 eV - the
highest harmonic energy previously observed in argon was 100
eV using 794 nm fundamental light. The use of the waveguide
geometry makes it possible for us to observe such
high harmonics because it counteracts the effect of plasma-
induced defocusing.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.DAMOP.G1.3