| Literature DB >> 32042171 |
Praveen Kumar Maroju1, Cesare Grazioli2, Michele Di Fraia3, Matteo Moioli1, Dominik Ertel1, Hamed Ahmadi1, Oksana Plekan3, Paola Finetti3, Enrico Allaria3, Luca Giannessi3,4, Giovanni De Ninno3,5, Carlo Spezzani3, Giuseppe Penco3, Simone Spampinati3, Alexander Demidovich3, Miltcho B Danailov3, Roberto Borghes3, George Kourousias3, Carlos Eduardo Sanches Dos Reis3, Fulvio Billé3, Alberto A Lutman6, Richard J Squibb7, Raimund Feifel7, Paolo Carpeggiani8, Maurizio Reduzzi9, Tommaso Mazza10, Michael Meyer10, Samuel Bengtsson11, Neven Ibrakovic11, Emma Rose Simpson11, Johan Mauritsson11, Tamás Csizmadia12, Mathieu Dumergue12, Sergei Kühn12, Harshitha Nandiga Gopalakrishna12, Daehyun You13, Kiyoshi Ueda13, Marie Labeye14, Jens Egebjerg Bækhøj14, Kenneth J Schafer14, Elena V Gryzlova15, Alexei N Grum-Grzhimailo15, Kevin C Prince3, Carlo Callegari3, Giuseppe Sansone16.
Abstract
Attosecond pulses are central to the investigation of valence- and core-electron dynamics on their natural timescales1-3. The reproducible generation and characterization of attosecond waveforms has been demonstrated so far only through the process of high-order harmonic generation4-7. Several methods for shaping attosecond waveforms have been proposed, including the use of metallic filters8,9, multilayer mirrors10 and manipulation of the driving field11. However, none of these approaches allows the flexible manipulation of the temporal characteristics of the attosecond waveforms, and they suffer from the low conversion efficiency of the high-order harmonic generation process. Free-electron lasers, by contrast, deliver femtosecond, extreme-ultraviolet and X-ray pulses with energies ranging from tens of microjoules to a few millijoules12,13. Recent experiments have shown that they can generate subfemtosecond spikes, but with temporal characteristics that change shot-to-shot14-16. Here we report reproducible generation of high-energy (microjoule level) attosecond waveforms using a seeded free-electron laser17. We demonstrate amplitude and phase manipulation of the harmonic components of an attosecond pulse train in combination with an approach for its temporal reconstruction. The results presented here open the way to performing attosecond time-resolved experiments with free-electron lasers.Year: 2020 PMID: 32042171 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2005-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962