The long light filaments generated in air by powerful ultrashort laser pulses, previously attributed to self-channeling, were investigated by use of gigawatt pulses from a Ti:sapphire chirped-pulse-amplification laser system. A filament contained only a small fraction of the pulse energy and always ended at the diffraction length of the beam (~100 m), independently of the pulse energy. These features are explained by the moving-focus model, which is presented as an alternative to the self-channeling model. Computer simulations involving ionization of the air also support the moving-focus model.
Some 'Keldysh-like' theories are analysed leading to a more pragmatic definition of the tunnelling regime of ionization of atoms. Rather than using the more extreme definition of tunnelling (i.e. gamma <<1, F<
A broad collection of experimental tunnel ionization data obtained using intense 10.6 mu m CO2 laser radiation, is presented. The variety of species studied includes three rare gas atoms (Xe, Kr and Ar), three homonuclear diatomic molecules (H2, O2 and N2), two heteropolar diatomic gases (CO and NO) and one triatomic molecule (CO2). The ionization behaviour going from the neutral particle to its associated singly charged ionic state, for all of the above species, is compared with a quasistatic tunnel ionization model. Good agreement between this theoretical model and the complete range of experimental results is found.
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