Abstract

We present an experimental demonstration of sum-frequency generation toward tunable picosecond, broadband radiation pulses in the extreme-ultraviolet regime, supported by adiabatically prepared atomic coherences. We drive a two-photon transition in a dense medium of xenon atoms with a long (nanosecond) pump laser pulse at the Fourier-transform-limited bandwidth and with a wavelength of 225 nm. The frequency of the pump pulse is slightly detuned from exact two-photon resonance. In this configuration, the medium is adiabatically driven by a process of coherent population return. The adiabatic passage process generates a maximal coherent superposition of two quantum states with large energy spacing. An additional, short (picosecond) probe laser pulse at a wavelength of 540 nm beats with the maximal atomic coherence and generates a short (picosecond) signal radiation pulse at 93 nm. As compared to conventional (diabatic) frequency conversion, the adiabatically driven maximal atomic coherence yields enhanced conversion efficiency and significantly enhanced stability.

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