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Paul Arpin

Researcher at University of Colorado Boulder

Publications -  32
Citations -  3091

Paul Arpin is an academic researcher from University of Colorado Boulder. The author has contributed to research in topics: High harmonic generation & Laser. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 29 publications receiving 2708 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul Arpin include Harvey Mudd College & National Institute of Standards and Technology.

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Bright Coherent Ultrahigh Harmonics in the keV X-ray Regime from Mid-Infrared Femtosecond Lasers

TL;DR: By guiding a mid-infrared femtosecond laser in a high-pressure gas, ultrahigh harmonics can be generated that emerge as a bright supercontinuum that spans the entire electromagnetic spectrum from the ultraviolet to more than 1.6 kilo–electron volts, allowing, in principle, the generation of pulses as short as 2.5 attoseconds.
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The attosecond nonlinear optics of bright coherent X-ray generation

TL;DR: In this paper, the Roentgen X-ray tube was used for high-order harmonic generation with small-scale femtosecond laser technology, which combines the microscopic attosecond science of atoms driven by intense laser fields with the macroscopic extreme nonlinear optics of phase matching.
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Bright, Coherent, Ultrafast Soft X-Ray Harmonics Spanning the Water Window from a Tabletop Light Source

TL;DR: This work extends bright, spatially coherent, attosecond pulses into the soft x-ray region for the first time and generates the broadest bright coherent bandwidth to date from any light source, small or large, that is consistent with a single subfemtosecond burst.
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Photosynthetic light harvesting: excitons and coherence

TL;DR: This review discusses how quantum coherence manifests in photosynthetic light harvesting and its implications, and examines the concept of an exciton, an excited electronic state delocalized over several spatially separated molecules, which is the most widely available signature of Quantum coherence in light harvesting.