Correlated Electron Dynamics in the X-Ray Regime
ORAL · Invited
Abstract
Free-electron lasers can now produce x-ray pulses with sub-femtosecond duration. This gives the opportunity to drive highly non-equilibrium states of matter and observe the electronic response on the attosecond timescale. We used attosecond angular streaking to explore the ultrafast motion of unstable, core-excited molecules generated by x-ray ionization. We measured the attosecond photoemission delay in the core ionization of nitric oxide. Electron correlation imparts rich structure to the photoemission delay, through interchannel coupling and post-collisional interaction. We also observed ultrafast electron motion in core-ionized 1,1-difluoroethylene, driven by partial coherence between core-level vacancies at nonequivalent carbon sites. In this system, the electronic coherence manifested in the nonlocal quantum correlation between atomic sites and, notably, occurred in the near-absence of charge density motion. This unexplored regime of coherent electronic motion is now experimentally accessible thanks to attosecond x-ray technology.
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Publication: T. Driver, M. Mountney, J. Wang et al., Nature 632, 762 (2024)<br>J. Wang, T. Driver, P. L. Franz et al., Phys. Rev. X 15, 011008 (2025)
Presenters
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Taran Driver
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
Authors
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Taran Driver
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory