We demonstrate for the first time the possibility to generate long plasma channels up to a distance of 1 km, using the terawatt femtosecond T&T laser facility. The plasma density was optimized by adjusting the chirp, the focusing and beam diameter. The interaction of filaments with transparent and opaque targets was studied.
Microwave guiding was demonstrated over 16cm in air using a large diameter hollow plasma waveguide. The waveguide was generated with the 100TW femtosecond laser system at the Advanced Laser Light Source facility. A deformable mirror was used to spatially shape the intense laser pulses in order to generate hundreds of filaments judiciously distributed in a cylindrical shape, creating a cylindrical plasma wall that acts as a microwave waveguide. The microwaves were confined for about 10ns, which corresponds to the free electron plasma wall recombination time. The characteristics of the plasma waveguide and the results of microwave guiding are presented.
Remote terahertz (THz) generation from a two-color femtosecond laser-induced filament in air was experimentally demonstrated. A record of remote THz emission at 16 m was achieved. THz pulse energy more than 250 nJ in the frequency range below 5.5 THz was recorded; this is two orders of magnitude stronger than that from single-color excitation. Back-scattered nitrogen (N2) fluorescence signal remotely measured with a lidar is linearly proportional to the THz emission, which would provide a more practical method to characterize the THz pulses.
We demonstrate that the terahertz emission from a dc-biased filament can be regarded as a sum of an elliptically polarized terahertz source (generated by a filament without external electric field) and a linearly polarized terahertz source induced by the external electric field applied to the filament. The peak frequency and linewidth of the linearly polarized terahertz source are related to the average plasma density of the filament.
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