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Nanoplasmonic electron acceleration by attosecond-controlled forward rescattering in silver clusters

2017, Passig, Johannes, Zherebtsov, Sergey, Irsig, Robert, Arbeiter, Mathias, Peltz, Christian, Göde, Sebastian, Skruszewicz, Slawomir, Meiwes-Broer, Karl-Heinz, Tiggesbäumker, Josef, Kling, Matthias F., Fennel, Thomas

In the strong-field photoemission from atoms, molecules, and surfaces, the fastest electrons emerge from tunneling and subsequent field-driven recollision, followed by elastic backscattering. This rescattering picture is central to attosecond science and enables control of the electron's trajectory via the sub-cycle evolution of the laser electric field. Here we reveal a so far unexplored route for waveform-controlled electron acceleration emerging from forward rescattering in resonant plasmonic systems. We studied plasmon-enhanced photoemission from silver clusters and found that the directional acceleration can be controlled up to high kinetic energy with the relative phase of a two-color laser field. Our analysis reveals that the cluster's plasmonic near-field establishes a sub-cycle directional gate that enables the selective acceleration. The identified generic mechanism offers robust attosecond control of the electron acceleration at plasmonic nanostructures, opening perspectives for laser-based sources of attosecond electron pulses.

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Raman gas self-organizing into deep nano-trap lattice

2016, Alharbi, M., Husakou, A., Chafer, M., Debord, B., Gérôme, F., Benabid, F.

Trapping or cooling molecules has rallied a long-standing effort for its impact in exploring new frontiers in physics and in finding new phase of matter for quantum technologies. Here we demonstrate a system for light-trapping molecules and stimulated Raman scattering based on optically self-nanostructured molecular hydrogen in hollow-core photonic crystal fibre. A lattice is formed by a periodic and ultra-deep potential caused by a spatially modulated Raman saturation, where Raman-active molecules are strongly localized in a one-dimensional array of nanometre-wide sections. Only these trapped molecules participate in stimulated Raman scattering, generating high-power forward and backward Stokes continuous-wave laser radiation in the Lamb-Dicke regime with sub-Doppler emission spectrum. The spectrum exhibits a central line with a sub-recoil linewidth as low as ∼14 kHz, more than five orders of magnitude narrower than conventional-Raman pressure-broadened linewidth, and sidebands comprising Mollow triplet, motional sidebands and four-wave mixing.

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

2017, Rupp, Daniela, Monserud, Nils, Langbehn, Bruno, Sauppe, Mario, Zimmermann, Julian, Ovcharenko, Yevheniy, Möller, Thomas, Frassetto, Fabio, Poletto, Luca, Trabattoni, Andrea, Calegari, Francesca, Nisoli, Mauro, Sander, Katharina, Peltz, Christian, J. Vrakking, Marc, Fennel, Thomas, Rouzée, Arnaud

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.