Abstract
The long-range propagation of two-colored femtosecond filaments produced by an infrared (IR) ultrashort pulse exciting third harmonics (TH) in the atmosphere is investigated, both theoretically and experimentally. First, it is shown that the coupling between the pump and TH components is responsible for a wide spectral broadening, extending from ultraviolet (UV) wavelengths to the mid-IR . Supercontinuum generation takes place continuously as the laser beam propagates, while TH emission occurs with a conversion efficiency as high as . Second, the TH pulse is proven to stabilize the IR filament like a saturable quintic nonlinearity through four-wave mixing and cross-phase modulation. Third, the filamentation is accompanied by a conical emission of the beam, which becomes enlarged at UV wavelengths. These properties are revealed by numerical simulations and direct experimental observations performed from the Teramobile laser facility.
- Received 15 July 2004
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.71.016602
©2005 American Physical Society