20 research outputs found
Engineering Ising-XY spin models in a triangular lattice via tunable artificial gauge fields
Emulation of gauge fields for ultracold atoms provides access to a class of
exotic states arising in strong magnetic fields. Here we report on the
experimental realisation of tunable staggered gauge fields in a periodically
driven triangular lattice. For maximal staggered magnetic fluxes, the doubly
degenerate superfluid ground state breaks both a discrete Z2 (Ising) symmetry
and a continuous U(1) symmetry. By measuring an Ising order parameter, we
observe a thermally driven phase transition from an ordered antiferromagnetic
to an unordered paramagnetic state and textbook-like magnetisation curves. Both
the experimental and theoretical analysis of the coherence properties of the
ultracold gas demonstrate the strong influence of the Z2 symmetry onto the
condensed phase
Visualizing Ultrafast Kinetic Instabilities in Laser-Driven Solids using X-ray Scattering
Ultra-intense lasers that ionize and accelerate electrons in solids to near
the speed of light can lead to kinetic instabilities that alter the laser
absorption and subsequent electron transport, isochoric heating, and ion
acceleration. These instabilities can be difficult to characterize, but a novel
approach using X-ray scattering at keV energies allows for their visualization
with femtosecond temporal resolution on the few nanometer mesoscale. Our
experiments on laser-driven flat silicon membranes show the development of
structure with a dominant scale of ~60\unit{nm} in the plane of the laser
axis and laser polarization, and ~95\unit{nm} in the vertical direction with
a growth rate faster than . Combining the XFEL experiments
with simulations provides a complete picture of the structural evolution of
ultra-fast laser-induced instability development, indicating the excitation of
surface plasmons and the growth of a new type of filamentation instability.
These findings provide new insight into the ultra-fast instability processes in
solids under extreme conditions at the nanometer level with important
implications for inertial confinement fusion and laboratory astrophysics
Alignment, orientation, and Coulomb explosion of difluoroiodobenzene studied with the pixel imaging mass spectrometry (PImMS) camera
Citation: Amini, K., Boll, R., Lauer, A., Burt, M., Lee, J. W. L., Christensen, L., . . . Rolles, D. (2017). Alignment, orientation, and Coulomb explosion of difluoroiodobenzene studied with the pixel imaging mass spectrometry (PImMS) camera. Journal of Chemical Physics, 147(1). doi:10.1063/1.4982220Laser-induced adiabatic alignment and mixed-field orientation of 2,6-difluoroiodobenzene (C6H3F2I) molecules are probed by Coulomb explosion imaging following either near-infrared strong-field ionization or extreme-ultraviolet multi-photon inner-shell ionization using free-electron laser pulses. The resulting photoelectrons and fragment ions are captured by a double-sided velocity map imaging spectrometer and projected onto two position-sensitive detectors. The ion side of the spectrometer is equipped with a pixel imaging mass spectrometry camera, a time-stamping pixelated detector that can record the hit positions and arrival times of up to four ions per pixel per acquisition cycle. Thus, the time-of-flight trace and ion momentum distributions for all fragments can be recorded simultaneously. We show that we can obtain a high degree of one-and three-dimensional alignment and mixed-field orientation and compare the Coulomb explosion process induced at both wavelengths. © 2017 Author(s)
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Jitter-correction for IR/UV-XUV pump-probe experiments at the FLASH free-electron laser
In pump-probe experiments employing a free-electron laser (FEL) in combination with a synchronized optical femtosecond laser, the arrival-time jitter between the FEL pulse and the optical laser pulse often severely limits the temporal resolution that can be achieved. Here, we present a pump-probe experiment on the UV-induced dissociation of 2,6-difluoroiodobenzene (C6H3F2I) molecules performed at the FLASH FEL that takes advantage of recent upgrades of the FLASH timing and synchronization system to obtain high-quality data that are not limited by the FEL arrival-time jitter. We discuss in detail the necessary data analysis steps and describe the origin of the time-dependent effects in the yields and kinetic energies of the fragment ions that we observe in the experiment
Effect of Auger recombination on transient optical properties in XUV and soft X-ray irradiated silicon nitride
Spatially encoded measurements of transient optical transmissivity became a standard tool for temporal diagnostics of free-electron-laser (FEL) pulses, as well as for the arrival time measurements in X-ray pump and optical probe experiments. The modern experimental techniques can measure changes in optical coefficients with a temporal resolution better than 10 fs. This, in an ideal case, would imply a similar resolution for the temporal pulse properties and the arrival time jitter between the FEL and optical laser pulses. However, carrier transport within the material and out of its surface, as well as carrier recombination may, in addition, significantly decrease the number of carriers. This would strongly affect the transient optical properties, making the diagnostic measurement inaccurate. Below we analyze in detail the effects of those processes on the optical properties of XUV and soft X-ray irradiated SiN, on sub-picosecond timescales. SiN is a wide-gap insulating material widely used for FEL pulse diagnostics. Theoretical predictions are compared with the published results of two experiments at FERMI and LCLS facilities, and with our own recent measurement. The comparison indicates that three body Auger recombination strongly affects the optical response of SiN after its collisional ionization stops. By deconvolving the contribution of Auger recombination, in future applications one could regain a high temporal resolution for the reconstruction of the FEL pulse properties measured with a SiN-based diagnostics tool
Time-resolved ionization measurements with intense ultrashort XUV and X-ray free-electron laser pulses
Modern free-electron lasers (FEL) operating in XUV (extreme ultraviolet) or X-ray range allow an access to novel research areas. An example is the ultrafast ionization of a solid by an intense femtosecond FEL pulse in XUV which consequently leads to a change of the complex index of refraction on an ultrashort timescale. The photoionization and subsequent impact ionization resulting in electronic and atomic dynamics are modeled with our hybrid code XTANT(X-ray thermal and non-thermal transitions) and a Monte Carlo code XCASCADE(X-ray-induced electron cascades). The simulations predict the temporal kinetics of FEL-induced electron cascades and thus yield temporally and spatially resolved information on the induced changes of the optical properties. In a series of experiments at FERMI and LCLS, single shot measurements with spatio-temporal encoding of the ionization process have been performed by a correlation of the FEL pump pulse with an optical femtosecond probe pulse. An excellent agreement between the experiment and the simulation has been found. We also show that such kind of experiments forms the basis for pulse duration and arrival time jitter monitoring as currently under development for XUV-FEL
Non-thermal structural transformation of diamond driven by x-rays
ntense x-ray pulses can cause the non-thermal structural transformation of diamond. At the SACLA XFEL facility, pump x-ray pulses triggered this phase transition, and probe x-ray pulses produced diffraction patterns. Time delays were observed from 0 to 250 fs, and the x-ray dose varied from 0.9 to 8.0 eV/atom. The intensity of the (111), (220), and (311) diffraction peaks decreased with time, indicating a disordering of the crystal lattice. From a Debye–Waller analysis, the rms atomic displacements perpendicular to the (111) planes were observed to be significantly larger than those perpendicular to the (220) or (311) planes. At a long time delay of 33 ms, graphite (002) diffraction indicates that graphitization did occur above a threshold dose of 1.2 eV/atom. These experimental results are in qualitative agreement with XTANT+ simulations using a hybrid model based on density-functional tight-binding molecular dynamics
Non-thermal structural transformation of diamond driven by x-rays
International audienceIntense x-ray pulses can cause the non-thermal structural transformation of diamond. At the SACLA XFEL facility, pump x-ray pulses triggered this phase transition, and probe x-ray pulses produced diffraction patterns. Time delays were observed from 0 to 250 fs, and the x-ray dose varied from 0.9 to 8.0 eV/atom. The intensity of the (111), (220) and (311) diffraction peaks decreased with time indicating a disordering of the crystal lattice. From a Debye-Waller analysis, the rms atomic displacements perpendicular to the (111) planes were observed to be significantly larger than those perpendicular to the (220) or (311) planes. At a long time delay of 33 ms, graphite (002) diffraction indicates that graphitization did occur above a threshold dose of 1.2 eV/atom. These experimental results are in qualitative agreement with XTANT+ simulations using a hybrid model based on density functional tight-binding moleculardynamics