Using strong electromagnetic fields to control x-ray processes
Abstract
Exploration of a new ultrafast-ultrasmall frontier in atomic and molecular physics has begun. Not only is is possible to control outer-shell electron dynamics with intense ultrafast optical lasers, but now control of inner-shell processes has become possible by combining intense infrared/optical lasers with tunable sources of x-ray radiation. This marriage of strong-field laser and x-ray physics has led to the discovery of methods to control reversibly resonant x-ray absorption in atoms and molecules on ultrafast timescales. Using a strong optical dressing field, resonant x-ray absorption in atoms can be markedly suppressed, yielding an example of electromagnetically induced transparency for x rays. Resonant x-ray absorption can also be controlled in molecules using strong non-resonant, polarized laser fields to align the framework of a molecule, and therefore its unoccupied molecular orbitals to which resonant absorption occurs. At higher laser intensities, ultrafast field ionization produces an irreversible change in x-ray absorption. Finally, the advent of x-ray free electron lasers enables first exploration of non-linear x-ray processes.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0809.3537,
title = {Using strong electromagnetic fields to control x-ray processes},
author = {Linda Young and Christian Buth and Robert W. Dunford and Phay J. Ho and Elliot P. Kanter and Bertold Krässig and Emily R. Peterson and Nina Rohringer and Robin Santra and Stephen H. Southworth},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0809.3537},
year = {2013}
}
Comments
8 pages, 11 figures, RevTeX4, submitted to Revista Mexicana de Fisica