Vigorous research efforts during the past several decades have successfully closed the “terahertz gap” between microwaves and infrared light, offering new and increasingly efficient ways to produce, detect, and manipulate radiation fields in the terahertz (THz) frequency range. In our laboratory, THz time-domain spectroscopy (THz-TDS) and optical-pump THz-probe (OPTP) experiments have been routinely utilized as ultrafast spectroscopy tools to investigate a variety of emerging quantum materials[1] and metamaterials[2]. The ultrafast THz pulses are produced by femtosecond laser excitation of photoconductive antennas, semiconductor surfaces (InAs), and nonlinear crystals (ZnTe, GaSe, and

- Photonics Insights
- Vol. 2, Issue 3, C05 (2023)
Abstract
A prominent solution to this problem has been to use laser-induced plasma in gases (such as air,
In general, THz emission requires that some directionality be defined in a system to produce a net current or nonlinear polarization, which thus requires inversion (or time reversal) symmetry breaking[11]. Because fluids consist of randomly oriented molecules that preserve inversion symmetry, the directionality must be defined by the optical field(s). In a simplified picture, transverse directional charge currents can be induced within a gas or liquid plasma by overlapping two laser pulses with different frequencies, e.g., at
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Gas-plasma-based THz generation and detection has matured for practical applications. It exhibits a smooth spectrum covering the entire THz frequency range, which is extremely attractive for spectroscopy and imaging applications. This broad spectral support also introduces faster THz pulses in the temporal domain, leading to higher peak THz fields (hundreds of kV/cm and more) as well as the ability to probe faster dynamics in THz spectroscopies[14]. Beyond these features, coherent control over the THz radiation can be achieved by varying the relative phase between the
Altogether, Chen et al. provide a comprehensive review of gas- and liquid-plasma-based THz wave photonics, illustrating a powerful set of capabilities of ultrabroadband, intense THz radiation for spectroscopy and nonlinear optics. In doing so, they offer a perspective on a field that clearly still has much room for growth. This perspective can be expected to stimulate further advances, as long as researchers are willing to go wherever the waves may take them.
References
[1] R. P. Prasankumar, A. J. Taylor. Optical Techniques for Solid-State Materials Characterization(2012).
[4] D. M. Mittleman. Twenty years of terahertz imaging. Opt. Express, 26, 9417(2018).
[5] G. Valusis et al. Roadmap of terahertz imaging 2021. Sensors, 21, 4092(2021).
[6] M. Tonouchi. Cutting-edge terahertz technology. Nat. Photonics, 1, 97(2007).

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