Abstract

We report experimental confirmation of the ionization-grating-induced transient birefringence predicted by Wahlstrand and Milchberg [Opt. Lett. 36, 3822 (2011)] and discuss its impact on the higher-order Kerr effect interpretation by Loriot et al. of pump-probe transient birefringence measurements made at 800 nm [Opt. Express 17, 13429 (2009)]. Measurement of the transient birefringence in air at 400 nm shows a negative contribution to the index of refraction at zero delay for frequencies within the pump bandwidth, the degenerate case, and no negative contribution for frequencies exceeding the pump bandwidth, the nondegenerate case. Our findings suggest that a reevaluation of the higher-order Kerr effect hypothesis of Loriot et al. is necessary.

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