Abstract
Wavelength-tunable ultrashort laser pulses in the visible spectral range are generated in a femtosecond laser filament in air through four-wave mixing of an intense 808-nm near-infrared (NIR) laser pulse and a weak tunable infrared (IR: 1.3–2.2 µm) laser pulse. We found that the external focusing geometries strongly influence the four-wave mixing efficiency in air filament. The measurements of the resultant four-wave mixing laser intensity reveal that changing both the tilting angle and the focal length of the focal lens can optimize the four-wave mixing signal. We interpret the process based on the strong influence of the external focusing on the plasma density and the volume of the filament during the filament formation.
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