Back to Search
Start Over
Femtosecond single- to few-electron point-projection microscopy for nanoscale dynamic imaging
- Source :
- Structural Dynamics vol. 3, article 023612 (2015)
- Publication Year :
- 2015
-
Abstract
- Femtosecond electron microscopy produces real-space images of matter in a series of ultrafast snapshots. Pulses of electrons self-disperse under space-charge broadening, so without compression, the ideal operation mode is a single electron per pulse. Here, we demonstrate for the first time femtosecond single-electron point projection microscopy (fs-ePPM) in a laser-pump fs-e-probe configuration. The electrons have an energy of only 150 eV and take tens of picoseconds to propagate to the object under study. Nonetheless, we achieve a temporal resolution with a standard deviation of 120 fs, combined with a spatial resolution of 100 nm, applied to a localized region of charge at the apex of a nanoscale metal tip induced by 30 fs 800 nm laser pulses at 50 kHz. These observations demonstrate real-space imaging of reversible processes such as tracking charge distributions is feasible whilst maintaining femtosecond resolution. Our findings could find application as a characterization method, which, depending on geometry could resolve tens of femtoseconds and tens of nanometres. Dynamically imaging electric and magnetic fields and charge distributions on sub-micron length scales opens new avenues of ultrafast dynamics. Furthermore, through the use of active compression, such pulses are an ideal seed for few-femtosecond to attosecond imaging applications which will access sub-optical cycle processes in nanoplasmonics.<br />Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Structural Dynamics
Details
- Database :
- arXiv
- Journal :
- Structural Dynamics vol. 3, article 023612 (2015)
- Publication Type :
- Report
- Accession number :
- edsarx.1512.00328
- Document Type :
- Working Paper
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4947098