525 research outputs found
Complete Characterization of Light Waves using Attosecond Pulses
The most direct way to probe the strength of an electric field, is to measure the force that
exerts to a charged particle. For a time varying field, charge placement within an interval
substantially shorter than the characteristic period of variation of the field is essential for
sampling its temporal evolution. Employing such a scheme to track the field variation
of light waves that changes its direction 1015 times per second, charge release shall be
confined within a fraction of a femtosecond.
In this thesis, the complete characterization of a light pulse is demonstrated experimentally
for the first time by probing its field variation using a 250 attosecond electron
burst. Such an ultrafast charge probe, can be generated by the impulsive ionization of
atoms, using an XUV attosecond pulse precisely synchronized with the light waveform to
be characterized. The technique allows access to the instantaneous value of the electric
field of IR, visible, or UV light and thereby opens the door for the synthesis of controlled,
extremely broadband and arbitrarily shaped light waveforms.
The above experiments, are presented along with critical pertinent developments on the
generation of few-cycle phase-controlled light waveforms and their subsequent exploitation,
for the generation of isolated XUV attosecond pulses.
Precisely characterized and controlled light fields and XUV attosecond pulses employed
in combination, hold the promise for probe and control of elementary processes evolving
on an attosecond time scale
Sub-Cycle Strong-Field Interferometry
A nonlinear interferometry scheme is described theoretically to induce and
resolve electron wave- function beating on time scales shorter than the optical
cycle of the time-delayed pump and probe pulses. By employing two moderately
intense few-cycle laser fields with a stable carrier-envelope phase, a large
range of the entire electronic level structure of a quantum system can be
retrieved. In contrast to single-photon excitation schemes, the retrieved
electronic states include levels that are both dipole- and
non-dipole-accessible from the ground electronic state. The results show that
strong-field interferometry can reveal both high-resolution and broad-band
spectral information at the same time with important consequences for
quantum-beat spectroscopy on attosecond or even shorter time scales.Comment: first submitted on April 19, 201
Genetic optimization of attosecond-pulse generation in light-field synthesizers
We demonstrate control over attosecond pulse generation and shaping by
numerically optimizing the synthesis of few-cycle to sub-cycle driver
waveforms. The optical waveform synthesis takes place in an ultrabroad spectral
band covering the ultraviolet-infrared domain. These optimized driver waves are
used for ultrashort single and double attosecond pulse production (with tunable
separation) revealing the potentials of the light wave synthesizer device
demonstrated by Wirth et al. [Science 334, 195 (2011)]. The results are also
analyzed with respect to attosecond pulse propagation phenomena
Attosecond control of electrons emitted from a nanoscale metal tip
Attosecond science is based on steering of electrons with the electric field
of well-controlled femtosecond laser pulses. It has led to, for example, the
generation of XUV light pulses with a duration in the sub-100-attosecond
regime, to the measurement of intra-molecular dynamics by diffraction of an
electron taken from the molecule under scrutiny, and to novel ultrafast
electron holography. All these effects have been observed with atoms or
molecules in the gas phase. Although predicted to occur, a strong light-phase
sensitivity of electrons liberated by few-cycle laser pulses from solids has
hitherto been elusive. Here we show a carrier-envelope (C-E) phase-dependent
current modulation of up to 100% recorded in spectra of electrons laser-emitted
from a nanometric tungsten tip. Controlled by the C-E phase, electrons
originate from either one or two sub-500as long instances within the 6-fs laser
pulse, leading to the presence or absence of spectral interference. We also
show that coherent elastic re-scattering of liberated electrons takes place at
the metal surface. Due to field enhancement at the tip, a simple laser
oscillator suffices to reach the required peak electric field strengths,
allowing attosecond science experiments to be performed at the 100-Megahertz
repetition rate level and rendering complex amplified laser systems
dispensable. Practically, this work represents a simple, exquisitely sensitive
C-E phase sensor device, which can be shrunk in volume down to ~ 1cm3. The
results indicate that the above-mentioned novel attosecond science techniques
developed with and for atoms and molecules can also be employed with solids. In
particular, we foresee sub-femtosecond (sub-) nanometre probing of (collective)
electron dynamics, such as plasmon polaritons, in solid-state systems ranging
in size from mesoscopic solids via clusters to single protruding atoms.Comment: Final manuscript version submitted to Natur
Carrier-envelope phase effects on the strong-field photoemission of electrons from metallic nanostructures
Sharp metallic nanotapers irradiated with few-cycle laser pulses are emerging
as a source of highly confined coherent electron wavepackets with attosecond
duration and strong directivity. The possibility to steer, control or switch
such electron wavepackets by light is expected to pave the way towards direct
visualization of nanoplasmonic field dynamics and real-time probing of electron
motion in solid state nanostructures. Such pulses can be generated by
strong-field induced tunneling and acceleration of electrons in the near-field
of sharp gold tapers within one half-cycle of the driving laser field. Here, we
show the effect of the carrier-envelope phase of the laser field on the
generation and motion of strong-field emitted electrons from such tips. This is
a step forward towards controlling the coherent electron motion in and around
metallic nanostructures on ultrashort length and time scales
The direct evaluation of attosecond chirp from a streaking measurement
We derive an analytical expression, from classical electron trajectories in a
laser field, that relates the breadth of a streaked photoelectron spectrum to
the group-delay dispersion of an isolated attosecond pulse. Based on this
analytical expression, we introduce a simple, efficient and robust procedure to
instantly extract the attosecond pulse's chirp from the streaking measurement.Comment: 4 figure
Attosecond double-slit experiment
A new scheme for a double-slit experiment in the time domain is presented.
Phase-stabilized few-cycle laser pulses open one to two windows (``slits'') of
attosecond duration for photoionization. Fringes in the angle-resolved energy
spectrum of varying visibility depending on the degree of which-way information
are observed. A situation in which one and the same electron encounters a
single and a double slit at the same time is discussed. The investigation of
the fringes makes possible interferometry on the attosecond time scale. The
number of visible fringes, for example, indicates that the slits are extended
over about 500as.Comment: 4 figure
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