4.6 Article

Macroscopic effects in high-order harmonic generation - a focal-averaging method based on the integral solution of the wave equation

Journal

OPTICS EXPRESS
Volume 30, Issue 7, Pages 12163-12177

Publisher

Optica Publishing Group
DOI: 10.1364/OE.456503

Keywords

-

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministry for Science, Higher Education and Youth
  2. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study introduces a macroscopic theory for simulating the high-order harmonic generation process, which reveals different spectral features compared to microscopic simulations based on two different methods. The shape of the spectrum is determined by the coherence, intensity, spatial, and temporal uniformity of the laser field.
A macroscopic theory of high-order harmonic generation (HUG) is presented, which applies a tbcal-averaging method based on the integral solution of the wave equation. The macroscopic high-harmonic yield is the coherent superposition of the single-atom contributions of all atoms of the generating medium, which are positioned at different spatial points of the laser focus and exposed to the space-time-dependent laser pulse. The HHG spectrum obtained in our macroscopic simulations is qualitatively different from the one obtained using the microscopic or single-atom theory of HHG. Coherent intensity focal averaging, the simpler and more approximate of two methods we introduced, gives the spectrum which forms a declining plateau with the same cutoff position as that of the microscopic spectrum. The second, more precise method, which we call coherent spatio-temporal focal averaging, shows that it is possible, changing the macroscopic conditions, to obtain an observable peak in the harmonic spectrum at an energy much lower than the microscopic cutoff energy. Generally, the high-harmonic yield appears to be dominated by the contributions of laser-pulse spatio-temporal regions with lower intensities as well as by interference, so that the high-energy plateau and its sharp cutoff are quenched in the theoretical simulation and, presumably, in the experiment. The height and position of this peak strongly depend on the macroscopic conditions. We confirmed these findings by applying our macroscopic theory to simulate two recent experiments with mid-infrared laser fields, one with a linearly polarized field and the other one with a bicircular field. (C) 2022 Optica Publishing Group under the terms of the Optica Open Access Publishing Agreement

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available