APS Logo

High-Resolution Inelastic X-ray Scattering for Temperature and Dynamics in High-Energy-Density Matter

ORAL · Invited

Abstract

Measuring ion temperature in high-energy-density matter remains one of the field’s central challenges, particularly in solid-density plasmas at electronvolt-scale temperatures, where standard diagnostics fail. We demonstrate a major advance using high-resolution inelastic X-ray scattering (IXS), which enables direct, model-independent measurement of ion temperature via Doppler broadening of the Rayleigh feature in backscattering geometry. In forward-scattering geometry, the technique resolves collective ion modes, where the sound speed is obtained from the Brillouin shift, and the temperature can be independently inferred from detailed balance between the Stokes and anti-Stokes peaks.

We report results from three experiments conducted at the Matter in Extreme Conditions instrument at LCLS, each demonstrating the capabilities of high-resolution inelastic X-ray scattering (IXS) across distinct physical regimes. First, we tracked ultrafast ion heating in thin gold foils irradiated by femtosecond lasers, revealing sub-picosecond electron-ion equilibration and crystalline lattice temperatures exceeding 14 times the melting point, well beyond the predicted entropy catastrophe threshold [1]. This marks the first direct, model-free measurement of ion temperature in such an extreme regime. In shock-compressed iron, Doppler shifts and broadening enabled simultaneous measurement of bulk flow velocity and post-shock ion temperature, providing benchmark Hugoniot data to validate VISAR-based diagnostics. Finally, by extending the technique to forward-scattering geometry, we resolved Brillouin peaks from acoustic modes in warm dense methane; the dispersion across multiple scattering angles yielded a sound speed 5.9 km/s, confirming the applicability of Birch’s law in this regime [2].

Publication: [1] T. G. White et al., Nature 643, 950 (2025). <br>[2] T. G. White et al., Phys. Rev. Research 6, L022029 (2024).

Presenters

  • Thomas White

    University of Nevada, Reno

Authors

  • Thomas White

    University of Nevada, Reno

  • Travis Griffin

    University of Nevada, Reno

  • Daniel Haden

    University of Nevada, Reno

  • Hae Ja Lee

    SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

  • Eric C Galtier

    SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

  • Eric F Cunningham

    SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

  • Dimitri Khaghani

    SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

  • Adrien Descamps

    Queen's University, Belfast

  • Lennart Wollenweber

    European XFEL, HED Schenefeld Germany

  • Ben Armentrout

    SLAC MEC Stanford California

  • Carson Howard Convery

    Columbia University

  • Karen Appel

    European XFEL GmbH

  • Luke B Fletcher

    SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

  • Sebastian Goede

    European XFEL

  • Jerome B Hastings

    SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

  • Jeremy Iratcabal

    University of Nevada, Reno

  • Emma Elizabeth McBride

    SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, Queen's University, Belfast

  • Jacob Matthew Molina

    Princeton University

  • Giulio Monaco

    Padova University

  • Landon Morrison

    University of Nevada, Reno

  • Hunter Stramel

    University of Nevada, Reno

  • Sameen Yunus

    University of California, Merced

  • Ulf Zastrau

    European XFEL

  • Siegfried H Glenzer

    SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

  • Gianluca Gregori

    University of Oxford

  • Dirk Gericke

    University of Warwick

  • Bob Nagler

    SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory