Observation of arrest of Kerr self-focusing in a 10 μm filament in air at 1 TW/cm<sup>2</sup> clamped intensity
ORAL
Abstract
In this paper we demonstrate for the first time self-guiding of a 10.2 μm ~1TW CO2 laser pulse in the atmosphere over at least 30 meters (~20 ZR). We observe that when the peak power of such pulses exceeds ~870 GW, a centimeter-diameter single filament is formed in air. We call such a single filament a megafilament because it confines an ~1TW laser pulse with several Joules of energy and its cross-section is 104 times larger than a typical near-IR single filament. The clamped intensity of ~1 TW/cm2 for the long-wave infrared light confined in this megafilament was measured to be much smaller than that required for the tunnel ionization of O2/N2. By anchoring the experimental data with numerical simulations based on the concept of many-body interactions in the atmospheric pressure gas, we find that Kerr self-focusing at such a low laser intensity is arrested by a new and different ionization mechanism due to many-body Coulomb ionization . The amount of free carriers produced inside of the filament is rather small (≤1013cm-3) but sufficient to effectively decrease the molecular polarizability during the laser pulse.
*This material is based on work supported by the AFOSR under award number FA9550-16-1-0139 DEF and the ONR MURI (4-442521- JC-22891).
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Presenters
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Sergei Tochitsky
- UCLA