49th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics APS Meeting
Volume 63, Number 5
Monday–Friday, May 28–June 1 2018;
Ft. Lauderdale, Florida
Session S05: New Theoretical Methods for Pulsed Radiation-matter Interaction
2:00 PM–4:00 PM,
Thursday, May 31, 2018
Room: Grand E
Chair: Chris Green, Purdue University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2018.DAMOP.S05.1
Abstract: S05.00001 : Strong field spectroscopy of electron dynamics: from laser filaments to strongly correlated solids
2:00 PM–2:30 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Misha Ivanov
(Max Born Institut)
Interaction of intense infrared laser light with matter, be it gases or solids, leads to rich and highly nonlinear electron
dynamics. This talk will cover two very different examples.
The first deals with gases, the second with strongly correlated solids. In atoms, unusual states can be created by
light fields with strengths comparable to the Coulomb field that binds valence electrons in atoms. One would expect
that such fields would easily set a valence electron free, perhaps within a single laser cycle. Yet, since late 1980s,
theorists have speculated that atomic states become more stable when the strength of the laser field substantially
exceeds the Coulomb attraction to the ionic core. The electron becomes nearly but not completely free: rapidly
oscillating in the laser field, it still feels residual attraction to the core, which keeps it bound. I will describe a
combination of experimental and theoretical results which show that these states arise not only in isolated atoms,
but also in gases at and above atmospheric pressure, where they can act as a gain medium during laser
filamentation. Using properly shaped laser pulses, gain in these states can be achieved within just a few cycles of
the guided field, leading to amplified emission in the visible, at lines peculiar to the laser-dressed atom. Our work
SUGGESTS that these unusual states of neutral atoms can be exploited to create a general ultrafast gain
mechanism during laser filamentation.
The second brings together two topics that, until very recently, have been the focus of intense but non-overlapping
research efforts. The first concerns high harmonic generation in solids, which occurs when intense light field excites
highly non-equilibrium electronic response in a semiconductor or a dielectric. The second concerns many-body
dynamics in strongly correlated systems such as the Mott insulator. Using theorist’s model of a strongly correlated
solid: the Hubbard model, we show that high harmonic generation can be used to time-resolve ultrafast many-body
dynamics associated with optically driven phase transition, with accuracy far exceeding one cycle of the driving light
field. These results pave the way for time-resolving highly non-equilibrium many body dynamics in strongly
correlated systems, with few femtosecond accuracy.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2018.DAMOP.S05.1