Zeptosecond free-electron compression through temporal lensing
Abstract
The pursuit of ever-shorter time scales is a frontier in modern physics, exemplified by the synthesis of attosecond light pulses -- an achievement made possible by coherently superimposing a broad range of photon energies, as required by the uncertainty principle. However, extending this progress into the zeptosecond regime poses significant challenges, as it demands phase-correlated optical spectra spanning hundreds of electronvolts. In this context, electrons offer a compelling alternative to light because they can be coherently manipulated to form broad energy superpositions, as demonstrated by the generation of attosecond pulses in ultrafast electron microscopes. Here, we propose a practical scheme for compressing free electrons into the zeptosecond domain by modulating their wave functions using suitably tailored broadband light fields. Building on recent advances in {free-electron--light--matter} interactions, our method introduces the concept of temporal lensing -- an extension of conventional optical lensing to the time domain -- to produce electron pulses with arbitrarily short durations.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2504.17770,
title = {Zeptosecond free-electron compression through temporal lensing},
author = {Xin Jin and Cruz I. Velasco and F. Javier García de Abajo},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2504.17770},
year = {2025}
}
Comments
18 pages, 9 figures, 41 references