Abstract An intense short-pulse laser obliquely incident on a clustered gas quickly converts the atomic clusters into hot plasma balls. The laser beam produces a second harmonic due to nonlinear… Click to show full abstract
Abstract An intense short-pulse laser obliquely incident on a clustered gas quickly converts the atomic clusters into hot plasma balls. The laser beam produces a second harmonic due to nonlinear response of cluster and plasma electrons. For enhancement of efficiency of second harmonic generation, there should be appropriate phase-matching between the incident laser beam and the generated harmonic. To achieve the required phase-matching, the ripple in cluster density and plasma electron density outside the cluster is introduced. The efficiency of second harmonic generation is sensitive to the angle between ripple wave vector k → o and the direction of the incident laser beam.
               
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