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Plasma is a complex system involving diverse collisional processes and interactions, such as electron-impact excitation, ionization, recombination, etc. One of the most important methods for studying the properties and dynamics of plasma is to analyze the radiations from plasma. Here, we demonstrate the high-order harmonic (HH) spectroscopy for probing the complex electron-atom collision (EAC) dynamics in a laser-induced gas plasma. These measurements were carried out by using an elliptically polarized pump and a time-delayed linearly polarized probe. The HH spectra from argon and krypton plasmas were recorded by scanning the time delay up to hundreds of picoseconds. We found that the delay-dependent HH yield contains three distinct regions, i.e., the first enhancement, the subsequent suppression, and the final restoration regions. A qualitative analysis shows that these features are clear signatures of the EAC processes and interactions involved in the delay-dependent HH spectroscopy.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/OL.43.001970 | DOI Listing |
Sci Rep
April 2023
School of Mathematics and Physics, Guangxi Minzu University, Nanning, 530006, China.
The spatial distribution characteristics of plumes induced by femtosecond laser ablation of silicon in vacuum are studied by using spectroscopy. The plume spatial distribution clearly shows two zones with different characteristics. The center of the first zone is at a distance of approximately 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUltrafast pump-high-harmonic-generation-probe spectroscopy aims to provide a unique observation window into electronic dynamics while using the infrared or visible light sources. While it is widely accepted that the role of excited bound states in high-harmonic generation is negligible, its dynamics play a significant role in time-resolved pump-probe measurements. Here we show that the time-resolved pump-high-harmonic-generation-probe measurement may reveal a significant (up to 20%) contribution of the quantum interference in electron ionization and recombination with atomic system, with the initial or the final state being an excited bound state.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlasma is a complex system involving diverse collisional processes and interactions, such as electron-impact excitation, ionization, recombination, etc. One of the most important methods for studying the properties and dynamics of plasma is to analyze the radiations from plasma. Here, we demonstrate the high-order harmonic (HH) spectroscopy for probing the complex electron-atom collision (EAC) dynamics in a laser-induced gas plasma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E
June 2017
Institut für Physik, Universität Rostock, 18051 Rostock, Germany.
We present an approach which allows the consistent treatment of bound states in the context of dc conductivity in dense partially ionized noble gas plasmas. Besides electron-ion and electron-electron collisions, further collision mechanisms owing to neutral constituents are taken into account. Especially at low temperatures of 10^{4}to10^{5} K, electron-atom collisions give a substantial contribution to the relevant correlation functions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
September 2015
School of Physics and Technology, V. N. Karazin Kharkiv National University, Svobody Square 4, 61022 Kharkiv, Ukraine.
Analytical expressions describing the electron energy distribution function (EEDF) in a dusty plasma are obtained from the homogeneous Boltzmann equation for electrons. The expressions are derived neglecting electron-electron collisions, as well as transformation of high-energy electrons into low-energy electrons at inelastic electron-atom collisions. At large electron energies, the quasiclassical approach for calculation of the EEDF is applied.
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