Number 567, November 29, 2001
by Phil Schewe, James Riordon, and Ben Stein
Attosecond Physics Has Arrived
An Austria-Canada-Germany collaboration (Ferenc Krausz, Vienna Institute
of Technology, 011-43-1-58801-38711, ferenc.krausz@tuwien.ac.at) reports
that it has produced and detected, for the first time, isolated x-ray
pulses lasting on the scale of attoseconds, where one attosecond is
a billionth of a billionth of a second (10-18 s). The reported
pulses, lasting approximately 650 attoseconds (as) and residing in the
soft x-ray part of the electromagnetic spectrum, subsequently provided
attosecond-scale measurements of a physical phenomenon (specifically,
the detachment of an electron from an atom by an x-ray photon).
With these observations, and several earlier ones by other groups, attophysics
becomes the short-timescale frontier of physics. It replaces femtochemistry,
the production of light pulses at the 10-15 s (femtosecond)
scale, in this regard. Just as a strobelight can yield stop-action photographs
of a falling water drop, femtosecond pulses can capture the ultrafast
steps of a chemical reaction between multiple atoms or molecules. But
attosecond pulses are better equipped to capture the even speedier motions
of electrons within atoms.
If light can be imagined as a wave of peaks and valleys, a one-second
visible light pulse is a train of roughly 600 trillion peaks and valleys
in length. The researchers report an attosecond pulse just 200 nanometers
long, carrying just over a dozen peaks and valleys. Therefore, the duration
of a light pulse can be thought of as the length along its direction
of travel. A 1.28-second pulse can stretch from an earthbound laboratory
to the moon; a 650-attosecond pulse would barely span the length of
two typical viruses.
Previous experiments have reported evidence of trains of attosecond
pulses following each other roughly every 1 fs (Papadogiannis
et al., Physical Review Letters, 22 November 1999,
covered in Update
467; Paul et al., Science,
1 June 2001). Other experiments (Bartels et al., Nature,
13 July 2000) have, according to their authors, already accessed attosecond-scale
physics with femtosecond pulses (Christov
et al., Physical Review Letters, 11 June 2001). But
the new experiment, according to Krausz and his colleagues, represents
the first detection and measurement of isolated attosecond pulses.
Such isolated pulses, Krausz states, are important for taking attosecond-resolution
snapshots of electron motion in atoms.
To accomplish their feat, the researchers first prepared an intense
fsec pulse and aimed it at neon gas. The interaction between the neon
gas and the fsec pulse created an attosecond-scale pulse in the soft
x-ray range. According to a helpful theoretical picture (Corkum,
Physical Review Letters, 27 September 1993), the fsec pulse ejects
electrons from neon atoms, and the resulting oscillations of the electrons
in the bath of fsec light produce an even shorter-duration soft-x-ray
pulse.
Producing attosecond light is only half the battle. The researchers
then had to measure its duration. By adjusting the delay between the
times at which the x-ray pulse and a fsec visible pulse hit a gas of
krypton atoms, the researchers affected the spectrum of energies in
the electrons liberated from the atoms. Such modulations in the observed
energy spread served as evidence for an x-ray pulse of 650 attoseconds.
Henry Kapteyn of JILA/University of Colorado (303-492-8198, kapteyn@jila.colorado.edu),
a member of a competing group, claims that the evidence is ambiguous
as to whether the collaboration detected isolated attosecond pulses
or trains of attosecond pulses. In reply, Krausz has invited Kapteyn to submit
a formal critique of the experiment to a scientific journal so as to provide an
opportunity for his team to respond in a similar fashion. This web page will post
references to such comments if and when they become available.
However this debate pans out, attosecond metrology has arrived, and
it will doubtlessly lead to some staggering physics experiments never
before possible. (Hentschel et al., Nature,
29 November 2001; some other papers leading to this accomplishment are
Sartania
et al., Optics Letters, October 15, 1997; Schnürer
et al., Physical Review Letters, 26 July 1999; and
Drescher et al., Science,
9 March 2001; other related articles are Richard
Fitzgerald, Physics Today, September 2000 and Corkum, Optics
and Photonics News, 6 March 1995.)
Insulator to Metal in Only 100 Femtoseconds
A new experiment has, for the first time, studied in detail how a crystal
undergoes a superfast phase change from the insulating state into a
metallic state on a femtosecond time scale. Andrea Cavalleri (now at
LBL, 510-495-2536, acavallieri@lbl.gov) and his colleagues at UC-San
Diego and the University of Quebec work with a sample consisting of
a 200-nm thick film of vanadium oxide (VO2). A 50-fsec laser
pulse enters the sample causing what is believed to be not one but two
phase transitions: one structural (the unit cell size increases a bit),
monitored with short x-ray pulses; and one electrical (insulator-to-metal),
monitored by short pulses of visible light. All of this done on an unprecedentedly
short timescale. This allowed the researchers to observe that the manifestation
of the solid in its new crystalline form did not happen piecemeal but
practically all at once; this had never been seen before.
For all the speed, though, this experiment still did not settle an old
question in condensed matter physics as to which comes, first the structural
change in the sample or the electrical change. Because the crystalline
reordering is so fast (only hundreds of fsec), and is reversible, and
because x rays scatter differently from the two contrasting crystalline
forms, it might be possible to use this whole process as a ultrafast
"Bragg switch" for sub-picosecond portions of a longer x-ray
wavetrain. The transformation from insulator to metal is an important
example of the large catalog of solid-to-solid phase transitions in
physics which usually occur because of a change in pressure or temperature;
the ice-induced failure of the sealing ring on the Challenger mission
is one example. (Cavalleri
et al., Physical Review Letters, 3 December 2001.)