Coherent diffractive imaging of single helium nanodroplets with a high harmonic generation source

Abstract

Coherent diffractive imaging of individual free nanoparticles has opened routes for the in situ analysis of their transient structural, optical, and electronic properties. So far, single-shot single-particle diffraction was assumed to be feasible only at extreme ultraviolet and X-ray free-electron lasers, restricting this research field to large-scale facilities. Here we demonstrate single-shot imaging of isolated helium nanodroplets using extreme ultraviolet pulses from a femtosecond-laser-driven high harmonic source. We obtain bright wide-Angle scattering patterns, that allow us to uniquely identify hitherto unresolved prolate shapes of superfluid helium droplets. Our results mark the advent of single-shot gas-phase nanoscopy with lab-based short-wavelength pulses and pave the way to ultrafast coherent diffractive imaging with phase-controlled multicolor fields and attosecond pulses.

Description
Keywords
harmonic analysis, imaging method, in situ measurement, nanoparticle, scattering, ultraviolet radiation
Citation
Rupp, D., Monserud, N., Langbehn, B., Sauppe, M., Zimmermann, J., Ovcharenko, Y., et al. (2017). Coherent diffractive imaging of single helium nanodroplets with a high harmonic generation source. 8(1). https://doi.org//10.1038/s41467-017-00287-z
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License
CC BY 4.0 Unported