Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1883844 Radiation Physics and Chemistry 2006 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

A time-resolved X-ray microprobe to study optical strong-field processes has been developed. Individual atoms or molecules located within the strong-field environment created by a focused ultrafast laser are probed by undulator-produced X-ray pulses to achieve spatial, temporal, spectral and polarization selectivity. Approximately 106 monochromatic X-rays per 100-ps pulse are focused into a ∼10 μm spot to selectively probe atoms in focal volumes where intensities up to 1015 W/cm2 can be present. In this paper, we describe the time-resolved X-ray microprobe and provide some illustrative examples from our work studying strong-field phenomena such as laser-modified absorption spectra, Coulomb explosion, transient laser-produced plasmas and molecular alignment.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Radiation
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