Title: The role of
1The role of Egap in filamentation
johanan_at_temple.edu
http//www.temple.edu/capr/
2Introduction
- When an ultrashort, ultra-intense laser pulse
travels through a transparent medium many highly
nonlinear effects occur. Cumulatively these
effects are described as filamentation when
they result in dramatic spectral, temporal, and
spatial changes in the pulse itself.
pclasim47.univ-lyon1.fr/ teramobile.html
3Overview
- Polarizability and the nonlinear refractive index
- Plasma generation in filamentation
- Spectral Broadening
- Conclusion
4The nonlinear refractive index
- The polarizability of a medium can be described
in general terms by the following equation
5The nonlinear refractive index
6Self-phase modulation and self-focusing
- Two important effects resulting from the
nonlinear refractive index are - Self-phase modulation (SPM)
- Self-focusing
7Self-phase modulation
- As an high intensity, ultrashort pulse propagates
through a medium it accumulates a nonlinear
phase - This corresponds to a shift in the instantaneous
frequency
8SPM and the intensity
- Thus, as a pulse propagates through a material
where n2 gt 0 it will accumulate new colors
proportionally to the change in intensity.
9SPM and the spectrum
Nonlinearly induced blue-shifting
Initial Pulse
Nonlinearly induced red-shifting
Initial pulse spectrum
post-SPM pulse spectrum
10Self-focusing
- Index of refraction through a convex lens
- Index of refraction due to the nonlinear
refractive index
11Catastrophic Pulse Collapse
Self-focusing starts
Catastrophic collapse of pulse!
- As the pulse self-focuses, the contribution of
the nonlinear refractive index increases. This,
in turn, increases self-focusing. With no
limiting mechanism this would lead to
catastrophic pulse collapse.
12Plasma generation
- As the pulse collapses, the intensity increases
enormously, which leads to plasma generation.
This results in defocusing of the pulse.
- Such plasma channels have been observed to
propagate over distances many times their
diffraction length.
13A moving-focus model
- The moving-focus model visualizes the pulse as a
transverse stack of quasi-CW slices, each of
which focuses at a distance
where
14Intensity Clamping
- Plasma defocusing imposes a limit on the
intensity which can be contained in a filament.
For pulses with power in excess of Pcrit, energy
is redistributed into secondary filaments which
have the same clamping intensity as the primary
filament.
Picture from Schroeder and Chin, Opt. Comm. 234,
399406 (2004)
15Mechanisms of intensity clamping
- Different mechanisms which have been proposed for
intensity clamping are - Plasma generation by avalanche ionization
- Plasma generation by multi-photon ionization (MPI)
16Multi-photon absorption/ionization
- The transition rate for MPA/MPI can be described
by the equation - wheresis the n-photon absorption coefficient and
I is the intensity. Typically, higher order MPA
processes require much higher intensities in
order to occur.
17MPI in different media
- The number of photons required to liberate
electrons is different for different media.
MPI in water
MPI in carbon disulfide
18Definition of Egap
- Egap, named after the band-gap in semiconductors,
is generally the HOMO-LUMO gap energy, or the UV
absorption cutoff. In gases the ionization
potential is usually used for this quantity.
19MPI in the moving-focus model
- When MPI occurs, slices focusing temporally and
spatially after plasma formation are effected by
the plasma contribution to the refractive index.
20The plasma-modified refractive index
- The refractive index at the back of the pulse can
be written - where the plasma contribution is negative.
Because of this there is a drop in the intensity
at the back of the pulse.
21MPI affects accumulation of ?NL
- Using the moving-focus model we can see that
phase will be accumulated at the front of the
pulse, then experience a sudden drop where plasma
has been formed.
22Self-steepening
Reference Shen, Gaeta
- The nonlinear refractive index can also produce a
sharp drop in phase through self-steepening. This
happens when high intensities are reached during
propagation
high intensity larger nTOT
peak retarded in time
intensity decreases rapidly
lower intensity smaller nTOT
wings travel at normal speed
23MPI-enhanced SPM leads to asymmetric spectral
broadening
- The result is highly asymmetric spectral
broadening.
24Spectral broadening increases with Egap
- In condensed media it has been shown that higher
Egap materials induce more spectral broadening.
Brodeur and Chin, J. Opt. Soc. Am. B 16, 637
(1999)
25Conclusion
- The UV absorption cutoff is an important factor
condensed media filamentation - It is useful in predicting the spectral extent of
the continuum generated
26References
- Brodeur and Chin, J. Opt. Soc. Am. B 16, 637
(1999) - Chin et al, Can. J. Phys. 83, 863-905 (2005)
- Brabec and Krausz, Phys. Rev. Lett. 78, 3282
(1997) - FuĂŸ et al, New J. of Phys. 8, (2006)
- R. W. Boyd. Nonlinear Optics. 2nd ed. Academic
Press, London. 2003 - DeMartini and Townes, Phys. Rev. 164, 312 (1967)
- Gaeta, Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 3582 (2000)