| Literature DB >> 32060288 |
Andreas Wituschek1, Lukas Bruder2,3, Enrico Allaria4, Ulrich Bangert5, Marcel Binz5, Roberto Borghes4, Carlo Callegari4, Giulio Cerullo6, Paolo Cinquegrana4, Luca Giannessi4,7, Miltcho Danailov4, Alexander Demidovich4, Michele Di Fraia4, Marcel Drabbels8, Raimund Feifel9, Tim Laarmann10,11, Rupert Michiels5, Najmeh Sadat Mirian4, Marcel Mudrich12, Ivaylo Nikolov4, Finn H O'Shea4, Giuseppe Penco4, Paolo Piseri13, Oksana Plekan4, Kevin Charles Prince4, Andreas Przystawik10, Primož Rebernik Ribič4,14, Giuseppe Sansone5, Paolo Sigalotti4, Simone Spampinati4, Carlo Spezzani4, Richard James Squibb9, Stefano Stranges15,16, Daniel Uhl5, Frank Stienkemeier5,17.
Abstract
The recent development of ultrafast extreme ultraviolet (XUV) coherent light sources bears great potential for a better understanding of the structure and dynamics of matter. Promising routes are advanced coherent control and nonlinear spectroscopy schemes in the XUV energy range, yielding unprecedented spatial and temporal resolution. However, their implementation has been hampered by the experimental challenge of generating XUV pulse sequences with precisely controlled timing and phase properties. In particular, direct control and manipulation of the phase of individual pulses within an XUV pulse sequence opens exciting possibilities for coherent control and multidimensional spectroscopy, but has not been accomplished. Here, we overcome these constraints in a highly time-stabilized and phase-modulated XUV-pump, XUV-probe experiment, which directly probes the evolution and dephasing of an inner subshell electronic coherence. This approach, avoiding any XUV optics for direct pulse manipulation, opens up extensive applications of advanced nonlinear optics and spectroscopy at XUV wavelengths.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32060288 PMCID: PMC7021897 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-14721-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Experimental scheme.
Intense twin-seed pulses are generated in an ultra-stable monolithic interferometer. The pulse delay τ is set by a wedge-based delay line (DL), and phase-locked acousto-optic modulators (AOMs) control the relative phase ϕ21 of the seed pulses. The time- and phase-controlled pulse pairs seed the high-gain harmonic generation (HGHG) process in the FEL, resulting in coherent XUV pulse pairs with precisely controlled timing and relative phase. The XUV pulse pair tracks the real-time evolution of electronic coherences induced in an atomic beam sample. Detection is done via photoionization with a third pulse from a near infrared (NIR) laser. Both photoelectrons and -ions are detected with a combined magnetic bottle electron (MB) and ion time-of-flight (iTOF) spectrometer. A continuous-wave reference laser is used to trace the phase evolution and jitter in the interferometer, recorded with a photodiode (PD). This signal is used for rotating frame sampling and phase-sensitive detection of the mass/energy-gated ion/electron yields with a lock-in amplifier (LIA).
Fig. 2XUV phase manipulation.
a Scheme of timing and phase control of the XUV pulse pair (violet) by manipulation of the seed pulse (blue) parameters. In this scheme, manipulation of pulse delay τ and phase difference ϕ21 = ϕ2 − ϕ1 are decoupled, in contrast to previous work[10,12,15]. b Demonstration of XUV phase control in Ramsey-type interference fringes for fixed delay τ = 250 fs and two different phase values ϕ21 recorded for the seed (blue) and its 5th harmonic (violet), respectively. The fringe spacing is inversely proportional to the pulse delay τ, while the fringe phase is directly proportional to the phase difference ϕ21. c Shot-to-shot phase manipulation of XUV pulses for different high harmonics for fixed delay τ = 250 fs. Shown are Ramsey-type fringes of the seed (1H) and harmonic FEL pulses (5H–10H). ϕ21 was incremented by 15 mrad steps between each laser shot leading to a quasi-continuous phase sweep. Full phase rotations of several periods of 2π are demonstrated without modification of τ. At the 10th harmonic, the spectrometer resolution is on the order of the fringe spacing, compromising the data quality slightly. All Ramsey-type fringes correspond to normalized single-shot events with no additional data processing applied.
Fig. 3XUV electronic coherence in helium.
a Energy scheme of helium with relevant levels and interaction pathways. b Real part of the downshifted WP signal, with the delay incremented in 2 fs steps. Temporal overlap region of seed pulses is indicated (gray area). Each data point corresponds to only 640 consecutive FEL shots, no additional data filtering was applied. c Data points taken with delay increment of 500 as (blue) compared to downshifted oscillation frequency of the excited transition (black). For comparison, the gray curve shows the theoretical rapid oscillation, that would be obtained without rotating frame detection (T = 174 as, see also inset). Due to rotating frame detection, we get a frequency downshift by a factor of ≈ 52, transferring the attosecond beats to the femtosecond regime. d Fourier transform (absolute value) of the signal, showing the He 1s → 4p resonance. The upper energy scale shows the downshifted frequency range obtained by rotating frame detection, the lower energy scale shows corresponding absolute energy values.
Fig. 4Phase-resolved real-time dephasing of a Fano resonance in argon.
a Excitation scheme for preparation and probing of the Ar 3s-6p inner subshell-valence coherence. b Decay of the 3s-6p coherence in the time domain, with real part of the complex signal S = A(τ)e (blue) and its decomposition into amplitude A(τ) (green) and phase ϕ(τ) (dashed-gray). c Linear susceptibility of the process obtained from Fourier transform of the signal: Absorption (blue) and dispersion (red) curve compared to the Fano lineshape from ref. [29] (black) and spectral phase ϕ(ω) (dashed gray), exhibiting a characteristic phase jump at the resonance of ≈π.