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Now it is possible to see a movie of an electron. The movie shows how
an electron rides on a light wave after just having been pulled away from
an atom. This is the first time an electron has ever been filmed, and the
results are presented in the latest issue of Physical Review Letters.
Previously it has been impossible to photograph electrons since their
extremely high velocities have produced blurry pictures. In order to
capture these rapid events, extremely short flashes of light are
necessary, but such flashes were not previously available. With the use of
a newly developed technology for generating short pulses from intense
laser light, so-called attosecond pulses, scientists at the Lund
University Faculty of Engineering in Sweden have managed to capture the
electron motion for the first time.
“It takes about 150 attoseconds for an electron to circle the nucleus
of an atom. An attosecond is 10-18 seconds long, or, expressed in another
way: an attosecond is related to a second as a second is related to the
age of the universe,” says Johan Mauritsson, an assistant professor in
atomic physics at the Faculty of Engineering, Lund University. He is one
of seven researchers behind the study, which was directed by him and
Professor Anne L’Huillier.
With the aid of another laser these scientists have moreover succeeded
in guiding the motion of the electron so that they can capture a collision
between an electron and an atom on film.
“We have long been promising the research community that we will be
able to use attosecond pulses to film electron motion. Now that we have
succeeded, we can study how electrons behave when they collide with
various objects, for example. The images can function as corroboration of
our theories,” explains Johan Mauritsson.
These scientists also hope to find out more about what happens with the
rest of the atom when an inner electron leaves it, for instance how and
when the other electrons fill in the gap that is created.
“What we are doing is pure basic research. If there happen to be future
applications, they will have to be seen as a bonus,” adds Johan Mauritsson.
The length of the film corresponds to a single oscillation of the
light, but the speed has then been ratcheted down considerably so that we
can watch it. The filmed sequence shows the energy distribution of the
electron and is therefore not a film in the usual sense.
Previously scientists have studied the movements of electrons using
indirect methods, such as by metering their spectrum. With these methods
it has only been possible to measure the result of an electron’s movement,
whereas now we have the opportunity to monitor the entire event.
It has been possible to create attosecond pulses for a couple of years
now, but not until now has anyone managed to use them to film electron
movements, since the attosecond pulses themselves are too weak to take
clear pictures.
“By taking several pictures of exactly the same moment in the process,
it’s possible to create stronger, but still sharp, images. A precondition
is for the process to be repeated in an identical manner, which is the
case regarding the movement of an electron in a ray of light. We started
with a so-called stroboscope. A stroboscope enables us to ‘freeze’ a
periodic movement, like capturing a hummingbird flapping its wings. You
then take several pictures when the wings are in the same position, such
as at the top, and the picture will turn out clear, despite the rapid
motion,” clarifies Johan Mauritsson.
The article appears in Physical Review Letters, vol. 100. Read the
article "Coherent Electron Scattering Captured by an Attosecond Quantum
Stroboscope" and see the movie at
http://www.atto.fysik.lth.se/
A popular science description of the article can be found at:
http://focus.aps.org/
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