42nd Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
Volume 56, Number 5
Monday–Friday, June 13–17, 2011;
Atlanta, Georgia
Session C6: DAMOP Thesis Prize Session
2:00 PM–4:00 PM,
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Room: A706
Chair: Ana Maria Rey, JILA and University of Colorado
Abstract ID: BAPS.2011.DAMOP.C6.2
Abstract: C6.00002 : Bright Attosecond Soft and Hard X-ray Supercontinua
2:30 PM–3:00 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Tenio Popmintchev
(JILA and University of Colorado at Boulder)
In this talk, I will present an experimentally feasible and
straightforward
route for generating bright, fully coherent, x-ray light by
combining
attosecond science with extreme nonlinear optics. By driving
high-order
harmonic generation using longer-wavelength mid-infrared lasers,
I show
that, in theory, bright coherent beams can extend into the soft
and hard
x-ray regions of the spectrum for the first time, essentially
solving the
phase matching problem in extreme nonlinear optics.
Experimentally, we
demonstrated bright high harmonic beams in the water window
region of the
spectrum and around the L-edges of magnetic materials - at the
magnetic
heart of the matter - for the first time. Most importantly,
scaling of the
macroscopic x-ray yield is surprisingly favorable as the laser
wavelength is
increased and the generated harmonic wavelength decreases. The
macroscopic
physics of phase matching requires higher gas pressures, which
compensates
for the poor microscopic single-atom high harmonic yield due to
quantum
diffusion of the rescattering electron wavepacket during the
longer time
spent in the continuum between ionization and recombination.
Extrapolating
this approach further, bright ultrafast harmonics can extend even
into the
hard x-ray region of the spectrum, promising to realize the coherent
tabletop version of the Roentgen X-ray tube. This will enable
atomic-site-specific electron dynamics in molecules, materials or at
surfaces to be captured in their characteristic time scales, as
well as
opening up applications bio-imaging of thick samples without the
need for
labeling or sectioning. Finally, the ultrabroad supercontinua can
support
coherent pulses as short as few attoseconds, and possibly even
zeptosecond
pulses in the near future.
\\[4pt]
[1] T. Popmintchev et al., ``Phase matched upconversion of
coherent ultrafast laser light into the soft and hard x-ray
regions of the spectrum'', PNAS 106, 10516 (2009).
\\[0pt]
[2] T. Popmintchev et al., ``The Attosecond Nonlinear Optics of
Bright Coherent X-Ray Generation'', Nature Photonics 4, 822
(2010). Featured on cover.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2011.DAMOP.C6.2