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Compact intense extreme-ultraviolet source

Optics 2021-12-03 v1 Atomic Physics

Abstract

High-intensity laser pulses covering the ultraviolet to terahertz spectral regions are nowadays routinely generated in a large number of laboratories. In contrast, intense extreme-ultraviolet (XUV) pulses have only been demonstrated using a small number of sources including free-electron laser facilities [1-3] and long high-harmonic generation (HHG) beamlines [4-9]. Here we demonstrate a concept for a compact intense XUV source based on HHG that is focused to an intensity of 2×10142 \times 10^{14} W/cm2^2, with a potential increase up to 101710^{17} W/cm2^2 in the future. Our approach uses tight focusing of the near-infrared (NIR) driving laser and minimizes the XUV virtual source size by generating harmonics several Rayleigh lengths away from the NIR focus. Accordingly, the XUV pulses can be refocused to a small beam waist radius of 600 nm, enabling the absorption of up to four XUV photons by a single Ar atom in a setup that fits on a modest (2 m) laser table. Our concept represents a straightforward approach for the generation of intense XUV pulses in many laboratories, providing novel opportunities for XUV strong-field and nonlinear optics experiments, for XUV-pump XUV-probe spectroscopy and for the coherent diffractive imaging of nanoscale structures.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2012.04566,
  title  = {Compact intense extreme-ultraviolet source},
  author = {Balázs Major and Omair Ghafur and Katalin Kovács and Katalin Varjú and Valer Tosa and Marc J. J. Vrakking and B. Schütte},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2012.04566},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

6 pages, 4 figures