ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Understanding how light interacts at the nanoscale with metals, semiconductors, or ordinary dielectrics is pivotal if one is to properly engineer nano-antennas, filters and, more generally, devices that aim to harness the effects of new physical phenomena that manifest themselves at the nanoscale. We presently report experimental results on second and third harmonic generation from 20nm- and 70nm-thick gold layers, for TE- and TM-polarized incident light pulses. We highlight and discuss for the first time the relative roles bound electrons and an intensity dependent free electron density (hot electrons) play in third harmonic generation. While planar structures are generally the simplest to fabricate, metal layers that are only a few nanometers thick and partially transparent are almost never studied. Yet, transmission offers an additional reference point for comparison, which through relatively simple experimental measurements affords the opportunity to test the accuracy of available theoretical models. Our experimental results are explained well within the context of the microscopic hydrodynamic model that we employ to simulate second and third harmonic conversion efficiencies, and to simultaneously and uniquely predict the nonlinear dispersive properties of a gold nanolayer under pulsed illumination. Using our experimental observations and our model, based solely on the measured third harmonic power conversion efficiencies we predict |chi3|~10^(-18)-10^(-17)(m/V)^2, triggered mostly by hot electrons, without resorting to the implementation of a z-scan set-up.
Noble metals with well-defined crystallographic orientation constitute an appealing class of materials for controlling light-matter interactions on the nanoscale. Nonlinear optical processes, being particularly sensitive to anisotropy, are a natural
The recent observation of high-harmonic generation from solids creates a new possibility for engineering fundamental strong-field processes by patterning the solid target with subwavelength nanostructures. All-dielectric metasurfaces exhibit high dam
We re-examine a 50+ year-old problem of deep central reversals predicted for strong solar spectral lines, in contrast to the smaller reversals seen in observations. We examine data and calculations for the resonance lines of H I, Mg II and Ca II, the
The $Kepler$ $problem$ studies the planar motion of a point mass subject to a central force whose strength varies as the inverse square of the distance to a fixed attracting center. The orbits form a 3-parameter family of unparametrized plane curves,
High-harmonic generation is one of the most fundamental processes in strong laser-field physics that has led to countless achievements in atomic physics and beyond. However, a rigorous quantum electrodynamical picture of the process has never been re