41st Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
Volume 55, Number 5
Tuesday–Saturday, May 25–29, 2010;
Houston, Texas
Session S2: Nanoplasmas and Ponderomotive Potentials
2:00 PM–4:00 PM,
Friday, May 28, 2010
Room: Imperial Center
Chair: Robert Jones, University of Virginia
Abstract ID: BAPS.2010.DAMOP.S2.1
Abstract: S2.00001 : Acceleration of neutral atoms in strong short-pulse laser fields
2:00 PM–2:30 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Ulli Eichmann
(Max Born Institute, Berlin)
Kinematic manipulation of neutral atoms in inhomogeneous laser
fields has been widely studied for weak to moderately strong
laser fields. Here we report on experiments where we have
investigated kinematic effects on neutral atoms using strong
short-pulse laser fields with intensities up to 10$^{16}$
Wcm$^{-2}$ and pulse durations in the range from 40 to 120 fs. We
measure deflections of neutral atoms, which correspond to ultra
strong accelerations with magnitudes as high as 10$^{14}$ times
Earth's gravitational acceleration. This is - to the best of our
knowledge - by far the strongest acceleration of neutral species
in external fields.
The momentum transfer to the neutral atoms during the short
interaction time is by far stronger than what one would expect
from the dipole force acting on the ground state atoms. To
explain our findings we first state that it is of vital
importance for our investigations that atoms can survive strong
laser pulses in long lived excited states. A quantitative model
for the underlying excitation mechanism is based on an extension
of the three step model of strong field atomic dynamics. In
essence, it is a ``frustrated tunnel ionization (FTI)'' process,
where the tunnel electron is oscillating strongly in the laser
field but eventually recaptured into an excited state of the
neutral atom after the laser pulse is over.
The observed deflection of the neutral atoms can be attributed to
the ponderomotive force that is acting on the quasi free electron
during the laser pulse, in accord with the FTI mechanism. It
converts quiver energy of the electron partially into
centre-of-mass motion of the whole atom, since the ionic core and
the tunnel electron are coupled by the Coulomb force. Observed
deflections for He and Ne atoms for different laser parameters
are in very good agreement with our theoretical predictions.
Implications of our results for strong field physics and further
prospects will be discussed.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2010.DAMOP.S2.1