Phase matching effects in high harmonic generation at the nanometer scale
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Optical Society of America
Abstract
Plasmon resonances are known to amplify the electromagnetic fields near metallic
nanostructures, providing a promising scheme to generate extreme-ultraviolet harmonics using
low power drivings. During high-order harmonic generation (HHG), the driving and harmonic
fields accumulate a phase di erence as they propagate through the target. In a typical set-up
–a laser focused into a gas jet– the propagation distances amount to several wavelengths, and
the cumulative phase-mismatch a ects strongly the e ciency and properties of the harmonic
emission. In contrast, HHG in metallic nanostructures is considered to overcome these limitations,
as the common sources of phase mismatch –optical density and focusing geometry– are negligible
for subwavelength propagation distances. We demonstrate that phase matching still plays a
relevant role in HHG from nanostructures due to the non-perturbative character of HHG, that
links the harmonic phase to the intensity distribution of the driving field. Our computations show
that widely used applications of phase matching control, such as quantum path selection and the
increase of contrast in attosecond pulse generation, are also feasible at the nanoscale.
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Bibliographic citation
M. Blanco, C. Hernández-García, A. Chacón, M. Lewenstein, M. T. Flores-Arias, and L. Plaja, "Phase matching effects in high harmonic generation at the nanometer scale," Opt. Express 25, 14974-14985 (2017)
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https://doi.org/10.1364/OE.25.014974Sponsors
Junta de Castilla y León (SA046U16) and MINECO (FIS2013-44174-P, FIS2016-75652-P,
FIS2015-71933-REDT, SEV-2015-0522, FIS2013-46768-P, FIS2016-79508-P). M. Blanco is
funded by FPU grant program of MECD. C. H.-G. is funded by Marie Curie International
Outgoing Fellowship within the EU Seventh Framework Programme for Research and Technological
Development (2007-2013), grant Agreement No. 328334. A. Chacón and M. Lewenstein
also acknowledge support from Adv. ERC grant OSYRIS, Generalitat de Catalunya (SGR 874,
CERCA Program), and Fundació Privada Cellex
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© 2017 Optical Society of America. Open Access. Users may use, reuse, and build upon the article, or use the article for text or data mining, so long as such uses are for non-commercial purposes and appropriate attribution is maintained. All other rights are reserved







