13–20 Sept 2013
Magnus-Haus of the German Physical Society
Europe/Berlin timezone

A New Era of X-ray Science: Beyond one-photon-at-a-time

Not scheduled
20m
Magnus-Haus of the German Physical Society

Magnus-Haus of the German Physical Society

Am Kupfergraben 7 10117 Berlin

Speaker

Mr Joachim Stohr (SLAC/Stanford)

Description

My talk will give a historic perspective of the revolutionary science that was enabled by the advent of high power sources of coherent electromagnetic radiation and the implications for future scientific opportunities with x-ray free electron lasers (X-FELs). The historical journey starts with the development of radar microwave sources in the 1940s that fueled the development of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) techniques which by now have led to 6 Nobel Prizes. The theoretical description of NMR as coherent processes between nuclear states by Rabi and Bloch also provided the theoretical basis for the optical laser and its applications. Over the last fifty years, many of the 10 Nobel prizes based on lasers are based on unique non-linear interactions of light with valence electrons. This unprecedented electronic control is made possible by the large photon degeneracy parameter of lasers in specific modes with many photons simultaneously participating in the interaction process. These historic developments suggest that another revolution is upon us, based on non-linear x-ray interactions induced by X-FELs. The higher photon energy of such x-ray lasers generates element and chemical state specific electronic core-to-valence transitions and the high X-FEL degeneracy parameter allows manipulating and controlling them within the femtosecond core hole lifetime through multi-photon stimulated interactions. This capability is completely new and was unavailable during the first 100+ years of x-ray science. I will discuss the concepts of describing non-linear x-ray interactions and at what x-ray fluences they become important. I will also discuss what beam parameters and instrumentation are required to advance this new area of science and mention associated with chemical reactivity and energy transfer.

Primary author

Mr Joachim Stohr (SLAC/Stanford)

Presentation materials