Abstract

Tunable far-infrared laser pulses were generated efficiently during two-color filamentation in air. Understanding the creation of few-cycle far-infrared laser pulses is important since it is at the frontier between two possible generation mechanisms. The first one is the four-wave mixing generation, associated to the generation of wavelengths from ultraviolet up to mid-infrared laser pulses. The second process is the formation of transient photocurrent, which was recently used to describe the generation of submillimetric (terahertz) waves. Comparison between experiments and simulations revealed that the four-wave mixing mechanism is dominant for the far-infrared generation during two-color filamentation.

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