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  1. Abstract The efficient generation, accurate detection, and detailed physical tracking of energetic electrons are of applied interest for high harmonics generation, electron-impact spectroscopy, and femtosecond time-resolved scanning tunneling microscopy. We here investigate the generation of photoelectrons (PEs) by exposing plasmonic nanostructures to intense laser pulses in the infrared (IR) spectral regime and analyze the sensitivity of PE spectra to competing elementary interactions for direct and rescattered photoemission pathways. Specifically, we measured and numerically simulated emitted PE momentum distributions from prototypical spherical gold nanoparticles (NPs) with diameters between 5 and 70 nm generated by short laser pulses with peak intensities of 8.0 × 10 12 and 1.2 × 10 13  W/cm 2 , demonstrating the shaping of PE spectra by the Coulomb repulsion between PEs, accumulating residual charges on the NP, and induced plasmonic electric fields. Compared to well-understood rescattering PE cutoff energies for strong-field photoemission from gaseous atomic targets (10× the ponderomotive energy), our measured and simulated PE spectra reveal a dramatic cutoff-energy increase of two orders of magnitude with a significantly higher contribution from direct photoemission. Our findings indicate that direct PEs reach up to 93 % of the rescattered electron cutoff energy, in contrast to 20 % for gaseous atoms, suggesting a novel scheme for the development of compact tunable tabletop electron sources. 
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  2. High harmonic generation (HHG) in atomic gases is generally assumed to originate from photoelectrons that are not perturbed by neighboring particles. In this paper, we study theoretically and experimentally the regime where this approximation breaks down. At high laser intensities, we experimentally find that producing soft x-rays beyond this single-collision condition leads to a strong reduction of the coherent HHG response and appearance of incoherent radiation. We generalize our results to phase-matched HHG with mid-infrared drivers, and determine that aminimum pulse energyis needed to simultaneously phase match the HHG process and keep photoelectrons unperturbed by surrounding particles. Therefore, while previous research showed that HHG efficiency is independent of the driving pulse energy if other experimental parameters are scaled accordingly, we find that this rule no longer applies for high photon energies. Our study thus provides important guidelines for the laser parameters needed for the generation of high flux soft x-ray high harmonics.

     
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  3. To solve the time-dependent Schrödinger equation in spatially inhomogeneous pulses of electromagnetic radiation, we propose an iterative semiclassical complex trajectory approach. In numerical applications, we validate this method agains ab initio numerical solutions by scrutinizing (a) electronic sates in combined Coulomb and spatially homogeneous laser felds and (b) sreaked photoemission from hydrogen atoms and plasmonic gold nanospheres. In comparison with sreaked photoemission calculations performed in srong-feld approximation, we demonsrate the improved reconsruction of the spatially inhomogeneous induced plasmonic infrared feld near a nanoparticle surface from sreaked photoemission spectra. 
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  4. null (Ed.)
    While recent experiments provided compelling evidence for an intricate dependence of attosecond photoemission-time delays on the solid’s electronic band structure, the extent to which electronic transport and dispersion in solids can be imaged in time-resolved photoelectron (PE) spectra remains poorly understood. Emphasizing the distinction between photoemission time delays measured with two-photon, two-color interferometric spectroscopy, and transport times, we demonstrate how the effect of energy dispersion in the solid on photoemission delays can, in principle, be observed in interferometric photoemission. We reveal analytically a scaling relation between the PE transport time in the solid and the observable photoemission delay and confirm this relation in numerical simulations for a model system. We trace photoemission delays to the phase difference the PE accumulates inside the solid and, in particular, predict negative photoemission delays. Based on these findings, we suggest a novel time-domain interferometric solid-state energy-momentum-dispersion imaging method. 
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  5. We analytically and numerically investigate the emission of high-order harmonic radiation from model solids by intense few-cycle midinfrared laser pulses. In single-active-electron approximation, we expand the active electron’s wave function in a basis of adiabatic Houston states and describe the solid’s electronic band structure in terms of an adjustable Kronig-Penney model potential. For high-order harmonic generation (HHG) from MgO crystals, we examine spectra from two-band and converged multiband numerical calculations. We discuss the characteristics of intra- and interband contributions to the HHG spectrum for computations including initial crystal momenta either from the  point at the center of the first Brillouin zone (BZ) only or from the entire first BZ. For sufficiently high intensities of the driving laser field, we find relevant contributions to HHG from the entire first BZ. Based on numerically calculated spectra, we scrutinize the cutoff harmonic orders as a function of the laser peak intensity and find good qualitative agreement with our analytical saddle-point-approximation predictions and published theoretical data. 
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