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01/15/2024 16:46

“Optical fingerprints” on an electron beam

Dr. Carmen Rotte Kommunikation & Medien
Max-Planck-Institut für Multidisziplinäre Naturwissenschaften

    The precise control of electron beams in so-called transmission electron microscopes (TEM) makes it possible to analyze materials or molecules at the atomic level. Combined with short light pulses, these devices can also be used to analyze dynamic processes. Researchers from Göttingen and Switzerland have now shown for the first time how electrons can distinguish complex light states in a microscopic light storage in a TEM.

    How can we use light to store information? Or utilize it to transmit data at lightning speed? The research field of photonics deals with these and many other questions. Modern integrated photonics makes it possible, for example, to guide or manipulate light in channels on a microchip. So-called non-linear optical processes can also be used, in which new colors or extremely short light pulses are created for very high light intensities. These technologies are already being used in telecommunications, for optical distance and speed measurements, and in quantum computing.

    Recently, new interfaces between photonics and other research fields, such as electron microscopy, have increasingly emerged. For example, optical microchips have recently been able to influence electron beams. In turn, electrons can be used to measure light fields. When an electron passes through an intense light field, it is accelerated or decelerated depending on its arrival time and the strength of the field. Scientists can then draw direct conclusions about the light’s properties from the changed speed of the electron.

    Different light states analyzed

    In a new study published in the journal Science, a team led by Claus Ropers from the Max Planck Institute (MPI) for Multidisciplinary Sciences in Göttingen and Tobias Kippenberg from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL) has now investigated various non-linear optical processes using an electron beam. To do this, they placed a ring-shaped light storage device, a so-called microresonator, in a TEM and generated light with different waveforms in it. Based on the characteristic interaction with the electron beam, they were then able to analyze the different light states in detail.

    “If we position the electron beam in such a way that the electrons fly past the resonators, we can measure the exact influence of the light field on the electron energy,” explains Jan-Wilke Henke from the MPI. His colleague Jasmin Kappert adds: “Each of the light’s possible waveforms leaves a characteristic fingerprint in the electron spectrum, which enables us to trace the formation of the different states.” The two doctoral students carried out the experiments in the Laboratory for Ultrafast Transmission Electron Microscopy at the MPI in Göttingen. The required photonic chips were developed by the team in Lausanne.

    Light pulses lasting less than one tenth of a trillionth of a second

    However, the researchers not only succeeded in characterizing light fields based on their effect on electrons: “In our experiments, we also generated so-called solitons – stable, ultrashort light pulses lasting less than one tenth of a trillionth of a second,” explains physicist Yujia Yang from EPFL. The possibility of generating solitons in a TEM extends the use of non-linear optics and microresonators into unexplored areas, says Tobias Kippenberg. “The interaction between electrons and solitons could, among other things, enable ultrafast electron microscopy with an unprecedentedly high repetition rate.”

    Max Planck Director Claus Ropers adds: “Our results show that electron microscopy is ideally suited for investigating non-linear optical dynamics on the nanoscale. We also assume that there will be many more applications for this technology in the future, both for the spatial and temporal manipulation of electron beams.”


    Contact for scientific information:

    Prof. Dr. Claus Ropers
    Department of Ultrafast Dynamics
    Max Planck Institute for Multidisciplinary Sciences, Göttingen, Germany
    phone: +49 551 39-39083
    e-mail: claus.ropers@mpinat.mpg.de


    Original publication:

    Yujia Yang, Jan-Wilke Henke, Arslan S. Raja, F. Jasmin Kappert, Guanhao Huang, Germaine Arend, Zheru Qiu, Armin Feist, Rui Ning Wang, Aleksandr Tusnin, Alexey Tikan, Claus Ropers, Tobias J. Kippenberg: Free-electron interaction with nonlinear optical states in microresonators. Science 383,168-173 (2024).
    https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adk2489


    More information:

    https://www.mpinat.mpg.de/4596588/pr_2401 – Original Press Release
    https://www.mpinat.mpg.de/ropers – Website of the Department of Ultrafast Dynamics at the Max Planck Institute for Multidisciplinary Sciences, Göttingen, Germany


    Images

    Jan-Wilke Henke and Jasmin Kappert, the Göttingen-based first authors of the new study, at the transmission electron microscope (TEM).
    Jan-Wilke Henke and Jasmin Kappert, the Göttingen-based first authors of the new study, at the trans ...
    Irene Böttcher-Gajewski
    Max Planck Institut for Multidisciplinary Sciences

    Illustration of the interaction between the electron beam (green) and a soliton light pulse circulating in the ring resonator (colored on a white background). The changes in the electron beam provide information about the properties of the light pulse.
    Illustration of the interaction between the electron beam (green) and a soliton light pulse circulat ...
    Ryan Allen
    Second Bay Studios


    Criteria of this press release:
    Scientists and scholars, Students
    Physics / astronomy
    transregional, national
    Research results, Scientific Publications
    English


     

    Jan-Wilke Henke and Jasmin Kappert, the Göttingen-based first authors of the new study, at the transmission electron microscope (TEM).


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    Illustration of the interaction between the electron beam (green) and a soliton light pulse circulating in the ring resonator (colored on a white background). The changes in the electron beam provide information about the properties of the light pulse.


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