Abstract

We investigated collisions of nitrogen and argon gas mixture with energetic electrons accelerated by Bragg incident intense infrared femtosecond laser pulses in ultraviolet filamentary plasma gratings. Significant decrease of fluorescence spectra of argon atoms were observed when a small amount of nitrogen gas was mixed with argon gas that facilitated observable argon-nitrogen collisions. We experimentally measured the fluorescence emission from the argon and nitrogen gas mixture under different driving pulse energies, the fluorescence decay dynamics after the impact excitation, as well as the fluorescence intensity dependence on the nitrogen and argon pressures. The experimental measurements were based on the electron acceleration and its subsequent impact with the gas mixture in the filamentary plasma gratings, which was essential for the observation of the dominant dissociative recombination in the gas mixture.

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