Physicists shed new light on ultrafast atomic physics

Physicists shed new light on ultrafast atomic physics

COLUMBUS, Ohio – For the first time, an international team of scientists has succeeded in detecting incredibly small time delays in the electron activity of a molecule when the particles are exposed to X-rays.

To measure these tiny high-speed events, known as AttosecondsResearchers used a laser to generate intense X-ray flashes that allowed them to map the processes inside an atom.

Their results showed that when electrons are ejected by X-rays, they interact with another type of particle, the Auger-Meitner electron, causing a secondary pause that has never been observed before. These findings have implications for a variety of research fields, as learning more about these interactions can provide new ideas about complex molecular dynamics, said Lou DiMauroCo-author of the study and professor in physics at Ohio State University.

“X-rays are interesting probes of matter,” DiMauro said. “You could use them to take a series of snapshots of a molecule as it evolves before or during a chemical reaction.”

The study was recently published in Nature.

While the past two decades have seen many remarkable advances in scientists’ ability to study attosecond delays using ultraviolet light, for years this task was made even more challenging by the lack of sophisticated tools to produce them.

It was so difficult that Pierre Agostini, professor emeritus of physics at Ohio State, was awarded the 2023 Nobel Prize in Physics for his previous work in the development Techniques for studying electron dynamics using light pulses lasting hundreds of attoseconds, a unit of time that a trillionth of a second.

Only relatively recently have new technologies such as the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS)a massive free-electron laser at Stanford University SLAC National Accelerator Laboratorymade it much easier to generate and visualize these impulses in the lab, DiMauro said.

Using the LCLS, the team studied how electrons inhabit a nitric oxide molecule, focusing on the electron particles located near the atom’s oxygen nucleus. They found that there were unexpectedly large delays, ranging as long as 700 attoseconds, a pattern that suggests more complicated factors may be at play in determining the causes, said Alexandra LandsmanCo-author of the study and professor of physics at Ohio State.

“We looked at what happens when you take an electron out of the very core of an atom. What surprised me was how complex the dynamics of these deeply bound electrons were,” Landsman said. “This means that the behavior is much more complex than scientists thought, and we need better theoretical descriptions to fully describe the interaction between light and matter.”

While more research is needed to better understand the structure of these interactions, uncovering previously hidden details also provides scientists with new insights to consider, DiMauro says.

For example, if scientists better understand the behavior of particles, some experts believe their discoveries could lead to breakthroughs in the early detection of cancer, such as using molecular markers to diagnose blood cancer or detect malignant tumors.

Furthermore, this paper suggests that, combined with theoretical models, researchers could use advances in attosecond science to glimpse matter at some of the smallest scales imaginable and study many broader mysteries of the physical universe in greater detail.

“I’m excited to see how we use attosecond pulses to learn more about science, engineering or nature in general,” DiMauro said. “Because what is described in this paper is a hint of a field that is really going to blossom.”

This study was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science and Office of Basic Energy Sciences. James Cryan, a principal scientist at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory at Stanford University and a graduate of Ohio State University, was the lead author of the study. Lisa Ortmann of Ohio State University was also a co-author.

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Contact: Lou DiMauro, (email protected)

Written by: Tatyana Woodall, (email protected)

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