UV filaments
Ali Rastegari, Alejandro Aceves, Jean-Claude Diels

TL;DR
This paper explores the properties, generation, and applications of ultraviolet (UV) filaments, including their theoretical modeling, experimental verification, and potential uses in spectroscopy and lightning control.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of UV filament characteristics, introduces experimental methods for their generation, and demonstrates novel applications in LIBS and guided discharges.
Findings
UV filaments differ from IR filaments in ionization mechanisms.
Experimental UV filaments were successfully generated at 266 nm.
UV filaments can be used for isotopically selective LIBS and lightning control.
Abstract
This chapter starts with a discussion of the main qualitative differences between UV and mid-IR filaments: from multiphoton ionization in the UV to tunnel ionization in the near- to mid-IR. A general qualitative analysis of the properties of single filaments versus wavelength follows. Because of their long pulse duration, a quasi-steady-state theory of their propagation is possible. An eigenvalue approach leads to a steady-state field envelope that is compared to the Townes soliton. However, that solution is close enough to a Gaussian shape to justify a parametric evolution approach. After this theoretical introduction, an experimental verification at 266 nm follows. Femtosecond UV filaments were generated with frequency-tripled Ti:sapphire sources and KrF amplifiers. The source for long-pulse filaments is an oscillator-amplifier Nd-YAG Q-switched system, frequency doubled, compressed,…
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