| Literature DB >> 28555640 |
Sergey Usenko1,2, Andreas Przystawik1, Markus Alexander Jakob2,3, Leslie Lamberto Lazzarino3, Günter Brenner1, Sven Toleikis1, Christian Haunhorst4, Detlef Kip4, Tim Laarmann1,2.
Abstract
Light-phase-sensitive techniques, such as coherent multidimensional spectroscopy, are well-established in a broad spectral range, already spanning from radio-frequencies in nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to visible and ultraviolet wavelengths in nonlinear optics with table-top lasers. In these cases, the ability to tailor the phases of electromagnetic waves with high precision is essential. Here we achieve phase control of extreme-ultraviolet pulses from a free-electron laser (FEL) on the attosecond timescale in a Michelson-type all-reflective interferometric autocorrelator. By varying the relative phase of the generated pulse replicas with sub-cycle precision we observe the field interference, that is, the light-wave oscillation with a period of 129 as. The successful transfer of a powerful optical method towards short-wavelength FEL science and technology paves the way towards utilization of advanced nonlinear methodologies even at partially coherent soft X-ray FEL sources that rely on self-amplified spontaneous emission.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28555640 PMCID: PMC5459985 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms15626
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Spectral distribution of SASE FEL pulses.
A typical single-shot spectrum of self-amplified spontaneous emission (SASE) and the average spectrum of 1,800 pulses are shown. The free-electron laser (FEL) spectral bandwidth selected by the 70 μm wide monochromator exit slit is indicated in the inset. Individual longitudinal FEL modes have a significantly broader spectrum exemplified by the Gaussian fit, that is, the transmitted photon flux exhibits a high degree of longitudinal (temporal) coherence.
Figure 2Experimental setup.
A free-electron laser (FEL) pulse with a central wavelength of 38 nm is diffracted from the split-and-delay unit comprised of two interleaved gratings, each with a 250 μm period. The generated ‘double-pulse' wavefront is then focused with a spherical mirror (f=300 mm) resulting in several diffraction orders separated by 46 μm. The spatial FEL irradiance distribution depends on the temporal separation of the pulse replicas and generates Xe+ in the centre of a time-of-flight spectrometer. It comprises a set of electrodes used for ion extraction and focusing, a drift tube and a position-sensitive detector (PSD), where the electron output from a micro-channel plate impacts a phosphor screen. The fluorescence signal from the PSD is imaged with a CCD camera. The achieved spatial resolution in the ionization volume of 4.6 μm is sufficient to resolve the different diffraction orders.
Figure 3Interferometric autocorrelation.
(a) Spatial image of the ionization volume reflecting the irradiance distribution along the free-electron laser (FEL) beam path. It is derived by accumulating single-shot ion images from 3,000 pulse pairs with individual relative-phase delays covering 450 as. The projection along the FEL beam direction clearly shows different diffraction orders. (b) The FEL light wave oscillation is monitored by plotting the normalized ratio between 0th and 1st diffraction order as a function of relative phase delay of each pulse pair. The horizontal error bars denote the bin width of 15.84 as. Vertically, 2σ error bars are given for the fitted ratio between the orders. The measured optical cycle at the FEL wavelength of 38 nm is 129±4 as.