28 research outputs found

    Laser streaking of free electrons at 25 keV

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    Compression of single-electron pulses with a microwave cavity

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    Few-femtosecond to attosecond electron pulses are required for advancing ultrafast diffraction and microscopy to the regime of electrons in motion. Here, we report the combination of a single-electron source with a microwave cavity for pulse compression. In such an arrangement, the electron pulses can become significantly shorter than the laser pulses used for electron generation. This comes at the expense of an increase in energy spread.We report the use of an energy analyzer for characterizing microwave-compressed singleelectron pulses. Phase effects, linearity, focal distances, incoming pulse durations and laser–microwave jitter are measured for three different synchronization approaches. The results demonstrate the applicability of a microwave cavity in the single-electron regime and identify jitter as the current limitation on the way to few-femtosecond, eventually attosecond pulses of single electrons.publishe

    Sub-phonon-period compression of electron pulses for atomic diffraction

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    Visualizing the rearrangement of atoms in a wide range of molecular and condensed-matter systems requires resolving picometre displacements on a 10-fs timescale, which is achievable using pump-probe diffraction, given short enough pulses. Here we demonstrate the compression of single-electron pulses with a de Broglie wavelength of 0.08 angstrom to a full-width at half-maximum duration of 28 fs or equivalently 12-fs root-mean square, substantially shorter than most phonon periods and molecular normal modes. Atomic resolution diffraction from a complex organic molecule is obtained with good signal-to-noise ratio within a data acquisition period of minutes. The electron-laser timing is found to be stable within 5 fs (s.d.) over several hours, allowing pump-probe diffraction at repetitive excitation. These measurements show the feasibility of laser-pump/electron-probe scans that can resolve the fastest atomic motions relevant in reversible condensed-matter transformations and organic chemistry

    5-Femtosecond Laser-Electron Synchronization for Pump-Probe Crystallography and Diffraction

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    Ultrafast Single-Electron Diffraction

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    Laser Streaking of Free-Electron Pulses at 25 keV

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