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![]() by Staff Writers Nuremberg, Germany (SPX) May 18, 2018
Physicists at Friedrich-Alexander-Universitat Erlangen-Nurnberg (FAU) have successfully generated controlled electron pulses in the attosecond range. They used optical travelling waves that are formed by laser pulses of varying wavelengths. The movements of electrons in atoms were revealed using attosecond free-electron pulses. The findings of the researchers from Erlangen have been published in the acclaimed journal Physical Review Letters. Scientists have been researching ways of generating packets of electrons in extremely short timescales for several years. Such pulses enable ultrafast movements to be tracked, for example vibrations in atomic lattices, phase transitions in materials or molecular bonds in chemical reactions. "The shorter the pulse, the faster the movements that can be mapped," explains Prof. Dr. Peter Hommelhoff, Chair of Laser Physics at FAU. "However, this also involves the special challenge of how to control the packets of electrons." Last year, Hommelhoff and his team successfully generated periodic electron pulses with a duration of 1.3 femtoseconds - a femtosecond is one quadrillionth of a second. To do so, they directed a continuous beam of electrons over a silicon lattice and superimposed it with the optical field of laser pulses.
From femtosecond to attosecond pulses These packets then interact with optical travelling waves that are formed in a vacuum by two infrared laser pulses of varying wavelengths. "The ponderomotive interaction causes a shift in the electron density," explains Norbert Schonenberger, a researcher at Prof. Hommelhoff's Chair and co-author of the study. "We break down the electron packet to a certain extent into even smaller packets to generate electron pulses in the attosecond range. The time delay in the arrival of the laser beams enables us to generate specific travelling waves and thus precisely control the trains of pulses." This method developed by the physicists at FAU could revolutionise experiments in electron diffraction and microscopy. In future, attosecond pulses will not only be able to be used to trace the movements of atoms , but also even to show the dynamics of electrons within atoms, molecules and solid bodies. The results have been published under the title "Ponderomotive Generation and Detection of Attosecond Free-Electron Pulse Trains" in the renowned journal Physical Review Letters.
![]() ![]() The big bell test challenges Einstein Washington DC (SPX) May 10, 2018 On November 30th, 2016, more than 100,000 people around the world contributed to a suite of first-of-a-kind quantum physics experiments known as The BIG Bell Test. Using smartphones and other internet-connected devices, participants contributed unpredictable bits, which determined how entangled atoms, photons, and superconducting devices were measured in twelve laboratories around the world. Scientists used the human input to close a stubborn loophole in tests of Einste ... read more
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