https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thz_freq_in_EM_spectrum.png?uselang=en-gb |
This frequency region is an awkward middle ground, however. That's sometimes why it's referred to as the "terahertz gap".
We tend to produce electromagnetic radiation by one of two approaches. Classically, accelerating charges radiate electromagnetic waves. In the low frequency limit, there are various ways to generate voltages that oscillate - we can in turn use those to drive oscillating currents and thus generate radio waves, for example. See here for a very old school discussion. It is not trivial to shake charges back and forth at THz frequencies, however. It can be done, but it's very challenging. One approach to generating a pulse of THz radiation is to use a photoconductive antenna. Take two electrodes close together on a semiconductor substrate, with a voltage applied between them. Smack the semiconductor with an ultrafast optical pulse that has a frequency high enough to photoexcite a bunch of charge carriers - those then accelerate from the electric field between the electrodes and emit a pulse of radiation, including THz frequencies.
The other limit we often take in generating light is to work with some quantum system that has a difference in energy levels that is the same energy as the photons we want to generate. This is the limit of atomic emission (say, having an electron drop from the 2p orbital to the 1s orbital of a hydrogen atom, and emitting an ultraviolet photon of energy around 10 eV) and also the way many solid state devices work (say, having an electron drop from the bottom of the conduction band to the top of the valence band in InGaAsP to produce a red photon of energy around 1.6 eV in a red LED). The problem with this approach for THz is that the energy scale in question is very small - 1 THz is about 4 milli-electron volts (!). As far as I know, there aren't naturally occurring solids with energy level splittings that small, so the approach from this direction has been to create artificial systems with such electronic energy gaps - see here. (Ironically, there are some molecular systems with transitions considerably lower in energy than the THz that can be used to generate microwaves, as in this famous example.)
It looks like THz is starting to take off for technologies, particularly as more devices are being developed for its generation and detection. SiGe-based transistors, for example, can operate at very high intrinsic speeds, and like in the thesis proposal I heard yesterday, these devices are readily made now and can be integrated into custom chips for exactly the generation and detection of radiation approaching a terahertz. Exciting times.