Controlling quantum numbers and light emission of Rydberg states via the laser pulse duration
L. Ortmann, C. Hofmann, I. A. Ivanov, A. S. Landsman

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that laser pulse duration significantly influences the quantum number distribution of Rydberg states in high harmonic generation, affecting EUV light emission and enabling enhanced control over high frequency radiation.
Contribution
It reveals that laser pulse duration impacts Rydberg state populations, a factor previously underappreciated, and identifies elastic recollision as the key mechanism involved.
Findings
Increasing pulse duration depletes lower-lying Rydberg states.
Decreased Rydberg state population reduces EUV yield.
Elastic recollision is identified as the underlying cause.
Abstract
High Harmonic Generation (HHG) creates coherent high frequency radiation via the process of strong field ionization followed by recombination. Recently, a complementary approach based on Frustrated Tunnel Ionization (FTI) was demonstrated (Nature Photonics 12, 620 (2018)). It uses spectrally separated peaks created by lower quantum number Rydberg states to produce coherent extreme ultraviolet (EUV) light. While much is understood about enhancing emission from HHG by controlling recombining electron trajectories, relatively little is known about controlling the quantum number distribution of Rydberg states. This distribution is generally believed to be determined primarily by field strength and laser frequency. We show that, in fact, it also changes significantly with the duration of the laser pulse: increasing pulse duration depletes lower-lying Rydberg states, thereby substantially…
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