HOMO-1 Contribution in High Harmonic Generation

ORAL

Abstract

High harmonic generation (HHG) proceeds in three steps. First, a part of the electron wave function tunnels out of the valence orbital. Secondly, the liberated electron wave packet accelerates in the laser field and finally coherently recombines with the initially ionized orbital. In molecules the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) is generally thought to be responsible for ionization and recombination. We have obtained experimental evidence that lower lying orbitals are involved in the HHG process of the N$_{2}$ molecule. Harmonic signal modulations at different molecular alignment angles display features due to a $\pi _{u}$ symmetry and have a higher spectral cut-off than the main HHG spectrum from the $\sigma _{g}$ -- symmetric HOMO. This suggests HHG from the HOMO-1 orbital.

*Research supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences.

Authors

  • Joseph Farrell

    • Stanford PULSE Center
  • Brian McFarland

    • Stanford PULSE Center
  • Markus Guehr

    • Stanford PULSE Center
  • Philip Bucksbaum

    • PULSE Center/Stanford University
    • Stanford University
    • Stanford University, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center
    • Stanford PULSE Center