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Propagator operator for pulse propagation in resonant media

2021, Morales, Felipe, Richter, Maria, Olvo, Vlad, Husakou, Anton

We show that, for the case of resonant media, the available models for unidirectional propagation of short pulses can face serious challenges with respect to numerical efficiency, accuracy, or numerical artifacts. We propose an alternative approach based on a propagator operator defined in the time domain. This approach enables precise simulations using short time windows even for resonant media and facilitates coupling of the propagation equation with first-principle methods such as the time-dependent Schödinger equation. Additionally, we develop a numerically efficient recipe to construct and apply such a propagator operator.

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Sub-laser-cycle control of coupled electron–nuclear dynamics at a conical intersection

2015, Richter, Maria, Bouakline, Foudhil, González-Vázquez, Jesús, Martínez-Fernández, Lara, Corral, Inés, Patchkovskii, Serguei, Morales, Felipe, Ivanov, Misha, Martín, Fernando, Smirnova, Olga

Nonadiabatic processes play a fundamental role in the understanding of photochemical processes in excited polyatomic molecules. A particularly important example is that of radiationless electronic relaxation at conical intersections (CIs). We discuss new opportunities for controlling coupled electron–nuclear dynamics at CIs, offered by the advent of nearly single-cycle, phase-stable, mid-infrared laser pulses. To illustrate the control mechanism, a two-dimensional model of the NO2 molecule is considered. The key idea of the control scheme is to match the time scale of the laser field oscillations to the characteristic time scale of the wave packet transit through the CI. The instantaneous laser field changes the shape and position of the CI as the wave packet passes through. As the CI moves in the laser field, it 'slices' through the wave packet, sculpting it in the coordinate and momentum space in a way that is sensitive to the carrier-envelope phase of the control pulse. We find that the electronic coherence imparted on the sub-laser-cycle time scale manifests during much longer nuclear dynamics that follow on the many tens of femtosecond time scale. Control efficiency as a function of molecular orientation is analyzed, showing that modest alignment is sufficient for showing the described effects.

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Rotational quantum beat lasing without inversion

2020, Richter, Maria, Lytova, Marianna, Morales, Felipe, Haessler, Stefan, Smirnova, Olga, Spanner, Michael, Ivanov, Misha

In standard lasers, light amplification requires population inversion between an upper and a lower state to break the reciprocity between absorption and stimulated emission. However, in a medium prepared in a specific superposition state, quantum interference may fully suppress absorption while leaving stimulated emission intact, opening the possibility of lasing without inversion. Here we show that lasing without inversion arises naturally during propagation of intense femtosecond laser pulses in air. It is triggered by the combination of molecular ionization and molecular alignment, both unavoidable in intense light fields. The effect could enable inversionless amplification of broadband radiation in many molecular gases, opening unusual opportunities for remote sensing. © 2020 Optical Society of America

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Imaging plasma formation in isolated nanoparticles with ultrafast resonant scattering

2020, Rupp, Daniela, Flückiger, Leonie, Adolph, Marcus, Colombo, Alessandro, Gorkhover, Tais, Harmand, Marion, Krikunova, Maria, Müller, Jan Philippe, Oelze, Tim, Ovcharenko, Yevheniy, Richter, Maria, Sauppe, Mario, Schorb, Sebastian, Treusch, Rolf, Wolter, David, Bostedt, Christoph, Möller, Thomas

We have recorded the diffraction patterns from individual xenon clusters irradiated with intense extreme ultraviolet pulses to investigate the influence of light-induced electronic changes on the scattering response. The clusters were irradiated with short wavelength pulses in the wavelength regime of different 4d inner-shell resonances of neutral and ionic xenon, resulting in distinctly different optical properties from areas in the clusters with lower or higher charge states. The data show the emergence of a transient structure with a spatial extension of tens of nanometers within the otherwise homogeneous sample. Simulations indicate that ionization and nanoplasma formation result in a light-induced outer shell in the cluster with a strongly altered refractive index. The presented resonant scattering approach enables imaging of ultrafast electron dynamics on their natural timescale.

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Non-instantaneous third-order optical response of gases in low-frequency fields

2022, Morales, Felipe, Richter, Maria, Ivanov, Misha, Husakou, Anton

It is commonly assumed that for low-intensity short optical pulses far from resonance, the third-order optical nonlinear response is instantaneous. We solve the three-dimensional time-dependent Schrödinger equation for the hydrogen atom and show that this is not the case: the polarization is not simply proportional to the cube of the electric field even at low intensities. We analyze the fundamental-frequency and third-harmonic nonlinear susceptibilities of hydrogen, investigate their dependence on intensity, and find that the delays in the Kerr response rapidly approach the femtosecond time-scale at higher intensities, while the delays in the third harmonic generation remain much lower. We also propose an experimental scheme to detect and characterize the above effects.