Optoelectronics

Manipulating x-ray light using visible light

18th August 2016
Enaie Azambuja
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By crossing two counter-rotating ultrafast laser beams in a gas target, scientists controlled the direction and polarisation of laser-like beams in the extreme ultraviolet and soft x-ray portions of the spectrum. This represents a ability to manipulate x-ray light using visible light, and obviates the need for inefficient and expensive optics that other approaches must use to filter and steer such beams.

This source enables, for example, tabletop measurements of dynamics in novel magnetic materials occurring on the fastest time scales. It also allows scientists to study chiral molecules, such as proteins or DNA, that come in left- and right-handed versions.

Furthermore, the method used to generate the beams provides a path to generating isolated attosecond (one quintillionth of a second) pulses of light with circular polarisation.

Researchers at JILA, a joint research institute of the University of Colorado and the National Institute of Standards and Technology, have developed a method to produce ultrafast pulses of circularly polarised extreme ultraviolet (EUV) light in a tabletop setup.

The approach uses high-harmonic generation (HHG) driven by ultrafast laser pulses. In this process, laser pulses rip electrons from atoms, accelerate the electrons to high energy, and smash them back into the parent ion to generate pulses of extreme ultraviolet light at harmonics of the driving laser frequency.

Specifically, the researchers developed a new experimental configuration in collaboration with the Colorado School of Mines, in which the HHG process is driven by two ultrafast laser beams of opposite circular polarisation that are crossed in a gas sample.

This novel HHG geometry simultaneously generates left- and right-circularly polarised EUV beams at each of the emitted harmonic wavelengths. This approach can be implemented on a laboratory tabletop, and the EUV beams of different helicity and harmonic order are physically separated from each other as well as from the driving lasers.

The angular separation of the EUV beams eliminates the need for expensive filters, mirrors, or gratings that otherwise would attenuate and temporally broaden the pulse. This flexible arrangement allows researchers to make measurements at a particular wavelength and polarisation by simply placing a sample into the isolated beam path.

The researchers demonstrated the practical use of this new light source by measuring the magnetic circular dichroism of a 20-nm iron film.

Furthermore, numerical simulations demonstrate that this phase-matching configuration makes possible the generation of isolated attosecond pulses with circular polarisation. Before this discovery, there were no experimentally realised methods for generating isolated circularly polarised high harmonics.

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