FRAME: femtosecond videography for atomic and molecular dynamics : Femtosecond videography

Ehn, Andreas; Bood, Joakim; Li, Zheming; Berrocal, Edouard, et al. (2017-09). FRAME: femtosecond videography for atomic and molecular dynamics : Femtosecond videography. Light, science & applications, 6, (9), 1 - 7
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DOI:
| Published | English
Authors:
Ehn, Andreas ; Bood, Joakim ; Li, Zheming ; Berrocal, Edouard , et al.
Department:
Combustion Physics
Abstract:

Many important scientific questions in physics, chemistry and biology require effective methodologies to spectroscopically probe ultrafast intra- and inter-atomic/molecular dynamics. However, current methods that extend into the femtosecond regime are capable of only point measurements or single-snapshot visualizations and thus lack the capability to perform ultrafast spectroscopic videography of dynamic single events. Here we present a laser-probe-based method that enables two-dimensional videography at ultrafast timescales (femtosecond and shorter) of single, non-repetitive events. The method is based on superimposing a structural code onto the illumination to encrypt a single event, which is then deciphered in a post-processing step. This coding strategy enables laser probing with arbitrary wavelengths/bandwidths to collect signals with indiscriminate spectral information, thus allowing for ultrafast videography with full spectroscopic capability. To demonstrate the high temporal resolution of our method, we present videography of light propagation with record high 200 femtosecond temporal resolution. The method is widely applicable for studying a multitude of dynamical processes in physics, chemistry and biology over a wide range of time scales. Because the minimum frame separation (temporal resolution) is dictated by only the laser pulse duration, attosecond-laser technology may further increase video rates by several orders of magnitude.



Many important scientific questions in physics, chemistry and biology require effective methodologies to spectroscopically probe
ultrafast intra- and inter-atomic/molecular dynamics. However, current methods that extend into the femtosecond regime are
capable of only point measurements or single-snapshot visualizations and thus lack the capability to perform ultrafast spectroscopic
videography of dynamic single events. Here we present a laser-probe-based method that enables two-dimensional videography
at ultrafast timescales (femtosecond and shorter) of single, non-repetitive events. The method is based on superimposing
a structural code onto the illumination to encrypt a single event, which is then deciphered in a post-processing step. This coding
strategy enables laser probing with arbitrary wavelengths/bandwidths to collect signals with indiscriminate spectral information,
thus allowing for ultrafast videography with full spectroscopic capability. To demonstrate the high temporal resolution of our
method, we present videography of light propagation with record high 200 femtosecond temporal resolution. The method is
widely applicable for studying a multitude of dynamical processes in physics, chemistry and biology over a wide range of time
scales. Because the minimum frame separation (temporal resolution) is dictated by only the laser pulse duration, attosecondlaser
technology may further increase video rates by several orders of magnitude.
ISSN:
2047-7538
LUP-ID:
e1c2b3f8-42c7-43f4-bc8d-2ee638537895 | Link: https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/e1c2b3f8-42c7-43f4-bc8d-2ee638537895 | Statistics

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