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Hard X-ray transient grating spectroscopy on bismuth germanate

Authors :
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemistry
Rouxel, Jérémy R.
Fainozzi, Danny
Mankowsky, Roman
Rösner, Benedikt
Seniutinas, Gediminas
Mincigrucci, Riccardo
Catalini, Sara
Foglia, Laura
Cucini, Riccardo
Döring, Florian
Kubec, Adam
Koch, Frieder
Bencivenga, Filippo
Haddad, Andre Al
Gessini, Alessandro
Maznev, Alexei A.
Cirelli, Claudio
Gerber, Simon
Pedrini, Bill
Mancini, Giulia F.
Razzoli, Elia
Burian, Max
Ueda, Hiroki
Pamfilidis, Georgios
Ferrari, Eugenio
Deng, Yunpei
Mozzanica, Aldo
Johnson, Philip J. M.
Ozerov, Dmitry
Izzo, Maria Grazia
Bottari, Cettina
Arrell, Christopher
Divall, Edwin James
Zerdane, Serhane
Sander, Mathias
Knopp, Gregor
Beaud, Paul
Lemke, Henrik T.
Milne, Chris J.
David, Christian
Torre, Renato
Chergui, Majed
Nelson, Keith A.
Masciovecchio, Claudio
Staub, Urs
Patthey, Luc
Svetina, Cristian
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemistry
Rouxel, Jérémy R.
Fainozzi, Danny
Mankowsky, Roman
Rösner, Benedikt
Seniutinas, Gediminas
Mincigrucci, Riccardo
Catalini, Sara
Foglia, Laura
Cucini, Riccardo
Döring, Florian
Kubec, Adam
Koch, Frieder
Bencivenga, Filippo
Haddad, Andre Al
Gessini, Alessandro
Maznev, Alexei A.
Cirelli, Claudio
Gerber, Simon
Pedrini, Bill
Mancini, Giulia F.
Razzoli, Elia
Burian, Max
Ueda, Hiroki
Pamfilidis, Georgios
Ferrari, Eugenio
Deng, Yunpei
Mozzanica, Aldo
Johnson, Philip J. M.
Ozerov, Dmitry
Izzo, Maria Grazia
Bottari, Cettina
Arrell, Christopher
Divall, Edwin James
Zerdane, Serhane
Sander, Mathias
Knopp, Gregor
Beaud, Paul
Lemke, Henrik T.
Milne, Chris J.
David, Christian
Torre, Renato
Chergui, Majed
Nelson, Keith A.
Masciovecchio, Claudio
Staub, Urs
Patthey, Luc
Svetina, Cristian
Source :
arXiv
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Optical-domain transient grating (TG) spectroscopy is a versatile background-free four-wave-mixing technique that is used to probe vibrational, magnetic and electronic degrees of freedom in the time domain1. The newly developed coherent X-ray free-electron laser sources allow its extension to the X-ray regime. X-rays offer multiple advantages for TG: their large penetration depth allows probing the bulk properties of materials, their element specificity can address core excited states, and their short wavelengths create excitation gratings with unprecedented momentum transfer and spatial resolution. Here, we demonstrate TG excitation in the hard X-ray range at 7.1 keV. In bismuth germanate (BGO), the non-resonant TG excitation generates coherent optical phonons detected as a function of time by diffraction of an optical probe pulse. This experiment demonstrates the ability to probe bulk properties of materials and paves the way for ultrafast coherent four-wave-mixing techniques using X-ray probes and involving nanoscale TG spatial periods.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
arXiv
Notes :
application/octet-stream, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1342472969
Document Type :
Electronic Resource