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Copyright Nature Publishing Group Aug 2014

Abstract

Directly monitoring atomic motion during a molecular transformation with atomic-scale spatio-temporal resolution is a frontier of ultrafast optical science and physical chemistry. Here we provide the foundation for a new imaging method, fixed-angle broadband laser-induced electron scattering, based on structural retrieval by direct one-dimensional Fourier transform of a photoelectron energy distribution observed along the polarization direction of an intense ultrafast light pulse. The approach exploits the scattering of a broadband wave packet created by strong-field tunnel ionization to self-interrogate the molecular structure with picometre spatial resolution and bond specificity. With its inherent femtosecond resolution, combining our technique with molecular alignment can, in principle, provide the basis for time-resolved tomography for multi-dimensional transient structural determination.

Details

Title
Diffraction using laser-driven broadband electron wave packets
Author
Xu, Junliang; Blaga, Cosmin I; Zhang, Kaikai; Lai, Yu Hang; Lin, C D; Miller, Terry A; Agostini, Pierre; Dimauro, Louis F
Pages
4635
Publication year
2014
Publication date
Aug 2014
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
e-ISSN
20411723
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1551986397
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Aug 2014