Abstract

We studied high-order harmonic generation (HHG) in graphene driven by either linearly or elliptically polarized mid-infrared (MIR) light, and we additionally applied terahertz (THz) pulses to modulate the electron distribution in graphene. The high-harmonic spectrum obtained using linearly polarized MIR light contains only odd-order harmonics. We found that the intensities of the fifth- and seventh-order harmonics are reduced by the modulation with the THz pulses. In addition, we found that the THz-induced reduction of the seventh-order harmonic driven by elliptically polarized MIR light (at ellipticity ε = 0.3) is larger than that of seventh-order harmonic driven by linearly polarized MIR light (ε = 0). The observed behavior can be reproduced by theoretical calculations that consider different electron temperatures (caused by the THz pulses). Furthermore, the observed stronger suppression of HHG driven by elliptically polarized light reveals the following: in the case of elliptically polarized light, the generation of harmonics via interband transitions to conduction-band states that are closer to the Dirac point is more important than in the case of linearly polarized light. In other words, the quantum pathways via interband transitions to low-energy states are the origin of the enhancement of HHG that can be achieved in graphene by using elliptically polarized light.

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