The interaction of high-power ultra-short lasers with materials offers fascinating wealth of
transient phenomena which are in the core of novel scientific research. Deciphering its evolution is
a complicated task that strongly depends on the details of the early phase of the interaction, which
acts as complex initial conditions. The entire process, moreover, is difficult to probe since it develops
close to target on the sub-picosecond timescale and ends after some picoseconds. Here we present
experimental results related to the fields and charges generated by the interaction of an ultra-short
high-intensity laser with metallic targets. The temporal evolution of the interaction is probed with a
novel femtosecond resolution diagnostics that enables the differentiation of the contribution by the
high-energy forerunner electrons and the radiated electromagnetic pulses generated by the currents
of the remaining charges on the target surface. Our results provide a snapshot of huge pulses, up to
0.6 teravolt per meter, emitted with multi-megaelectronvolt electron bunches with sub-picosecond
duration and are able to explore the processes involved in laser-matter interactions at the femtosecond
timescale