Abstract

Coherent extreme ultraviolet (EUV) line emissions can be generated from an atom excited through frustrated tunneling ionization (FTI). The phase variation of the EUV emission in a generation medium along the propagation direction is a critical parameter that determines the phase-matching condition of this new light source. Here we show that the EUV emission sensitively depends on the intensity and phase of a driving laser pulse and the target position. Angle-resolved EUV spectra measured at different target positions and the carrier-envelope phases of the laser pulse exhibit an intensity modulation, showing similar behavior to that of a long-trajectory high harmonic radiation. The four-step model developed for the FTI emission accurately describes the coherent control of the EUV emission. These findings are essential ingredients for developing coherent extreme ultraviolet sources with high photon flux and for utilizing the FTI emission in time-resolved spectroscopy.

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