A ttosecond electron wavepackets are produced when an intense laser field ionizes an atom or a molecule 1 . When the laser field drives the wavepackets back to the parent ion, they interfere with the bound wavefunction, producing coherent subfemtosecond extreme-ultraviolet light bursts. When only a single return is possible 2,3 , an isolated attosecond pulse is generated. Here we demonstrate that by modulating the polarization of a carrier-envelope phase-stabilized short laser pulse 4 , we can finely control the electron-wavepacket dynamics. We use high-order harmonic generation to probe these dynamics. Under optimized conditions, we observe the signature of a single return of the electron wavepacket over a large range of energies. This temporally confines the extreme-ultraviolet emission to an isolated attosecond pulse with a broad and tunable bandwidth. Our approach is very general, and extends the bandwidth of attosecond isolated pulses in such a way that pulses of a few attoseconds seem achievable. Similar temporal resolution could also be achieved by directly using the broadband electron wavepacket. This opens up a new regime for timeresolved tomography of atomic or molecular wavefunctions 5,6 and ultrafast dynamics.During high-order harmonic generation (HHG) in gas 7 , short electron wavepackets (EWPs) are periodically released by high-field ionization. Their subsequent coherent interaction with the remaining bound wavefunction leads to coherent extremeultraviolet (XUV) emission. The T 0 /2 periodicity of this process (T 0 being the laser optical period) ensures that only odd harmonics of the fundamental radiation are emitted. Temporally, the XUV pulses are emitted as a train of chirped attosecond pulses [8][9][10] (1 attosecond = 10 −18 s). For both plateau (low energy) and cut-off (high energy) harmonics, specific focusing conditions ensure that only a single attosecond pulse is emitted every half cycle 11,12 . Extracting an isolated attosecond pulse from this train requires breaking the periodicity of the process, so that XUV emission is only possible within a single half cycle of the fundamental pulse. In this way, isolated 250-attosecond-long Figure 1 Spectra generated in argon. Spectra emitted from an argon medium irradiated with a polarization-modulated pulse (τ = 5 fs, δ = 6.2 fs, β = 0 • ) as a function of the CEP shift. For some CEPs, harmonic peaks appear, whereas for other CEPs, they broaden up to a continuum.pulses were recently obtained 13 by selecting the (highly intensity dependent) cut-off harmonics generated in neon by a 5-fs linearly polarized, fundamental pulse with stabilized carrierenvelope phase (CEP). With this technique, the minimum pulse duration achievable is limited by the (∼10 eV) bandwidth of the selected cut-off harmonics, which prevents us reaching the sub-100-attosecond domain.To isolate a broadband attosecond pulse, we used a different approach 2 . Our approach relies on the strong HHG sensitivity on the ellipticity, ε, of the fundamental field, which is largely nature phy...
We have investigated the intensity dependence of high-order harmonic generation in argon when the two shortest quantum paths contribute to the harmonic emission. For the first time to our knowledge, experimental conditions were found to clearly observe interference between these two quantum paths that are in excellent agreement with theoretical predictions. This result is a first step towards the direct experimental characterization of the full single-atom dipole moment and demonstrates an unprecedented accuracy of quantum path control on an attosecond time scale.
Coherent x-ray diffractive imaging is a powerful method for studies on nonperiodic structures on the nanoscale. Access to femtosecond dynamics in major physical, chemical, and biological processes requires single-shot diffraction data. Up to now, this has been limited to intense coherent pulses from a free electron laser. Here we show that laser-driven ultrashort x-ray sources offer a comparatively inexpensive alternative. We present measurements of single-shot diffraction patterns from isolated nano-objects with a single 20 fs pulse from a table-top high-harmonic x-ray laser. Images were reconstructed with a resolution of 119 nm from the single shot and 62 nm from multiple shots.
High-order harmonic generation in argon driven by 25-fs-light pulses is investigated from the gaseous to the cluster regime. The harmonic cutoff observed in presence of clusters shows a considerable extension with respect to the gaseous phase. Harmonic spectra are investigated as a function of cluster size, showing the existence of an optimal cluster dimension, which maximizes the harmonic photon yield.
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