Singly ionized nitrogen molecules in ambient air pumped by 800 nm femtosecond laser give rise to superradiant emission. Here, we study this superradiance by injecting a pair of resonant seeding… Click to show full abstract
Singly ionized nitrogen molecules in ambient air pumped by 800 nm femtosecond laser give rise to superradiant emission. Here, we study this superradiance by injecting a pair of resonant seeding pulses at different intensity ratios inside the nitrogen gas plasma. Strong modulation of the 391.4 nm superradiant emission with a period of 1.3 fs is observed when the delay between the two seeding pulses is finely tuned. The modulation contrast is increased and then decreased with the delay time when the second seed pulse is stronger than the first one, and the maximum modulation contrast occurs at longer delay time when the second seeding pulse is stronger. This reveals the increase of the macroscopic polarization with time after the seeding pulse. Moreover, these observations provide a new level of control on the "air lasing" based on nitrogen ions, which can find potential applications in optical remote sensing.
               
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