Probing electronic wavefunctions by all-optical attosecond interferometry
Abstract
Photoelectron spectroscopy is a powerful method that provides insight into the quantum mechanical properties of a wide range of systems. The ionized electron wavefunction carries information on the structure of the bound orbital, the ionic potential as well as the photo-ionization dynamics itself. While photoelectron spectroscopy resolves the absolute amplitude of the wavefunction, retrieving the spectral phase information has been a long-standing challenge. Here, we transfer the electron phase retrieval problem into an optical one by measuring the time-reversed process of photo-ionization -- photo-recombination -- in attosecond pulse generation. We demonstrate all-optical interferometry of two independent phase-locked attosecond light sources. This measurement enables us to directly determine the phase shift associated with electron scattering in simple quantum systems such as helium and neon, over a large energy range. In addition, the strong-field nature of attosecond pulse generation resolves the dipole phase around the Cooper minimum in argon through a single scattering angle, along with phase signatures of multi-electron effects. Our study bears the prospect of probing complex orbital phases in molecular systems as well as electron correlations through resonances subject to strong laser fields.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1810.05021,
title = {Probing electronic wavefunctions by all-optical attosecond interferometry},
author = {Doron Azoury and Omer Kneller and Shaked Rozen and Alex Clergerie and Yann Mairesse and Baptiste Fabre and Bernard Pons and Barry D. Bruner and Nirit Dudovich and Michael Krüger},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1810.05021},
year = {2018}
}
Comments
Manuscript as submitted to Nature Photonics (April 2018)