| Literature DB >> 22182083 |
E P Kanter1, B Krässig, Y Li, A M March, P Ho, N Rohringer, R Santra, S H Southworth, L F DiMauro, G Doumy, C A Roedig, N Berrah, L Fang, M Hoener, P H Bucksbaum, S Ghimire, D A Reis, J D Bozek, C Bostedt, M Messerschmidt, L Young.
Abstract
We show that high fluence, high-intensity x-ray pulses from the world's first hard x-ray free-electron laser produce nonlinear phenomena that differ dramatically from the linear x-ray-matter interaction processes that are encountered at synchrotron x-ray sources. We use intense x-ray pulses of sub-10-fs duration to first reveal and subsequently drive the 1s↔2p resonance in singly ionized neon. This photon-driven cycling of an inner-shell electron modifies the Auger decay process, as evidenced by line shape modification. Our work demonstrates the propensity of high-fluence, femtosecond x-ray pulses to alter the target within a single pulse, i.e., to unveil hidden resonances, by cracking open inner shells energetically inaccessible via single-photon absorption, and to consequently trigger damaging electron cascades at unexpectedly low photon energies.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22182083 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.107.233001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Rev Lett ISSN: 0031-9007 Impact factor: 9.161