Nonlinear reversal of photo-excitation on the attosecond time scale improves ultrafast x-ray diffraction images
physics.optics
/ Authors
Anatoli Ulmer, Phay J. Ho, Bruno Langbehn, Stephan Kuschel, Linos Hecht, Razib Obaid, Simon Dold, Taran Driver, Joseph Duris, Ming-Fu Lin
and 21 more authors
David Cesar, Paris Franz, Zhaoheng Guo, Philip A. Hart, Andrei Kamalov, Kirk A. Larsen, Xiang Li, Michael Meyer, Kazutaka Nakahara, Robert G. Radloff, River Robles, Lara Rönnebeck, Nick Sudar, Adam M. Summers, Linda Young, Peter Walter, James Cryan, Christoph Bostedt, Daniela Rupp, Agostino Marinelli, Tais Gorkhover
/ Abstract
The advent of isolated and intense sub-femtosecond X-ray pulses enables tracking of quantummechanical motion of electrons in molecules and solids. The combination of X-ray spectroscopy and diffraction imaging is a powerful approach to visualize non-equilibrium dynamics in systems beyond few atoms. However, extreme x-ray intensities introduce significant electronic damage, limiting material contrast and spatial resolution. Here we show that newly available intense subfemtosecond (sub-fs) x-ray FEL pulses can outrun most ionization cascades and partially reverse x-ray damage through stimulated x-ray emission in the vicinity of a resonance. In our experiment, we compared thousands of coherent x-ray diffraction patterns and simultaneously recorded ion spectra from individual Ne nanoparticles injected into the FEL focus. Our experimental results and theoretical modeling reveal that x-ray diffraction increases and the average charge state decreases in particles exposed to sub-fs pulses compared to those illuminated with 15-femtosecond pulses. Sub-fs exposures outrun most Auger decays and impact ionization processes, and enhance nonlinear effects such as stimulated emission, which cycle bound electrons between different states. These findings demonstrate that intense sub-fs x-ray FEL pulses are transformative for advancing high-resolution imaging and spectroscopy in chemical and material sciences, and open the possibilities of coherent control of the interaction between x-rays and complex specimen beyond few atoms.