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Tunable non-integer high-harmonic generation in a topological insulator

Authors :
Schmid, C. P.
Weigl, L.
Grössing, P.
Junk, V.
Gorini, C.
Schlauderer, S.
Ito, S.
Meierhofer, M.
Hofmann, N.
Afanasiev, D.
Kokh, K.A.
Tereschenko, O.E.
Gudde, J.
Evers, F.
Wilhelm, J.
Richter, K.
Hofer, U.
Huber, R.
Source :
Nature. May 20, 2021, Vol. 593 Issue 7859, p385, 6 p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

When intense lightwaves accelerate electrons through a solid, the emerging high-order harmonic (HH) radiation offers key insights into the material.sup.1-11. Sub-optical-cycle dynamics--such as dynamical Bloch oscillations.sup.2-5, quasiparticle collisions.sup.6,12, valley pseudospin switching.sup.13 and heating of Dirac gases.sup.10--leave fingerprints in the HH spectra of conventional solids. Topologically non-trivial matter.sup.14,15 with invariants that are robust against imperfections has been predicted to support unconventional HH generation.sup.16-20. Here we experimentally demonstrate HH generation in a three-dimensional topological insulator--bismuth telluride. The frequency of the terahertz driving field sharply discriminates between HH generation from the bulk and from the topological surface, where the unique combination of long scattering times owing to spin-momentum locking.sup.17 and the quasi-relativistic dispersion enables unusually efficient HH generation. Intriguingly, all observed orders can be continuously shifted to arbitrary non-integer multiples of the driving frequency by varying the carrier-envelope phase of the driving field--in line with quantum theory. The anomalous Berry curvature warranted by the non-trivial topology enforces meandering ballistic trajectories of the Dirac fermions, causing a hallmark polarization pattern of the HH emission. Our study provides a platform to explore topology and relativistic quantum physics in strong-field control, and could lead to non-dissipative topological electronics at infrared frequencies. High-harmonic generation from the Dirac-like surface state of a topological insulator is separated from bulk contributions and continuously tuned by the carrier-envelope phase of the driving lightwave.<br />Author(s): C. P. Schmid [sup.1] , L. Weigl [sup.1] , P. Grössing [sup.2] , V. Junk [sup.2] , C. Gorini [sup.2] [sup.7] , S. Schlauderer [sup.1] , S. Ito [sup.3] [...]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
593
Issue :
7859
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.662388792
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03466-7