High order modes of intense second harmonic light produced from a plasma aperture

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Abstract

Because of their ability to sustain extremely high-amplitude electromagnetic fields and transient density and field profiles, plasma optical components are being developed to amplify, compress, and condition high-power laser pulses. We recently demonstrated the potential to use a relativistic plasma aperture - produced during the interaction of a high-power laser pulse with an ultrathin foil target - to tailor the spatiotemporal properties of the intense fundamental and second-harmonic light generated [Duff et al., Sci. Rep. 10, 105 (2020)]. Herein, we explore numerically the interaction of an intense laser pulse with a preformed aperture target to generate second-harmonic laser light with higher-order spatial modes. The maximum generation efficiency is found for an aperture diameter close to the full width at half maximum of the laser focus and for a micrometer-scale target thickness. The spatial mode generated is shown to depend strongly on the polarization of the drive laser pulse, which enables changing between a linearly polarized TEM01 mode and a circularly polarized Laguerre-Gaussian LG01 mode. This demonstrates the use of a plasma aperture to generate intense higher-frequency light with selectable spatial mode structure.

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Bacon, E. F. J., King, M., Wilson, R., Frazer, T. P., Gray, R. J., & McKenna, P. (2022). High order modes of intense second harmonic light produced from a plasma aperture. Matter and Radiation at Extremes, 7(5). https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0097585

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