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By News Staff | February 22nd 2008 09:09 AM | 6 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
It has always been impossible to clearly photograph electrons since their extremely high velocities have produced blurry pictures. In order to capture these rapid events, extremely short flashes of light are necessary, but such flashes were not previously available.

With the use of a newly developed technology for generating short pulses from intense laser light, so-called attosecond pulses, scientists at the Lund University Faculty of Engineering in Sweden have managed to capture the electron motion for the first time.

The movie shows how an electron rides on a light wave after just having been pulled away from an atom. This is the first time an electron has ever been filmed, and the results are presented in the latest issue of Physical Review Letters.

Experimental results obtained in helium at an intensity of 1:2 1013 W=cm2 are shown. The results are
distinctively different from those taken in argon (Fig. 1).With this higher intensity, more momentum is transferred to the electrons, and in combination with the lower initial energy, some electrons return to the atomic potential for further interaction. In the first panel, we compare the experimental results (right) with theoretical calculations (left) obtained for the same conditions. The excellent agreement is the strongest evidence for coherent scattering effects in the experiment. All the substructures are well reproduced except for the highly saturated innermost peak in the experiment, which most likely is due to above threshold ionization of residual water in the experimental chamber.



“It takes about 150 attoseconds for an electron to circle the nucleus of an atom. An attosecond is 10^-18 seconds long, or, expressed in another way: an attosecond is related to a second as a second is related to the age of the universe,” says Johan Mauritsson, an assistant professor in atomic physics at the Faculty of Engineering, Lund University. He is one of seven researchers behind the study, which was directed by him and Professor Anne L’Huillier.

With the aid of another laser these scientists have moreover succeeded in guiding the motion of the electron so that they can capture a collision between an electron and an atom on film.

“We have long been promising the research community that we will be able to use attosecond pulses to film electron motion. Now that we have succeeded, we can study how electrons behave when they collide with various objects, for example. The images can function as corroboration of our theories,” explains Johan Mauritsson.






These scientists also hope to find out more about what happens with the rest of the atom when an inner electron leaves it, for instance how and when the other electrons fill in the gap that is created.

“What we are doing is pure basic research. If there happen to be future applications, they will have to be seen as a bonus,” adds Johan Mauritsson.

The length of the film corresponds to a single oscillation of the light, but the speed has then been ratcheted down considerably so that we can watch it. The filmed sequence shows the energy distribution of the electron and is therefore not a film in the usual sense.

Previously scientists have studied the movements of electrons using indirect methods, such as by metering their spectrum. With these methods it has only been possible to measure the result of an electron’s movement, whereas now we have the opportunity to monitor the entire event.

It has been possible to create attosecond pulses for a couple of years now, but not until now has anyone managed to use them to film electron movements, since the attosecond pulses themselves are too weak to take clear pictures.

“By taking several pictures of exactly the same moment in the process, it’s possible to create stronger, but still sharp, images. A precondition is for the process to be repeated in an identical manner, which is the case regarding the movement of an electron in a ray of light. We started with a so-called stroboscope. A stroboscope enables us to ‘freeze’ a periodic movement, like capturing a hummingbird flapping its wings. You then take several pictures when the wings are in the same position, such as at the top, and the picture will turn out clear, despite the rapid motion,” clarifies Johan Mauritsson.

Coherent Electron Scattering Captured By an Attosecond Quantum Stroboscope, J. Mauritsson, P. Johnsson, E. Mansten, M. Swoboda, T. Ruchon, A. L´Huillier, and K. J. Schafer, Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 073003, (issue of 22 February 2008)

Comments

The authors wrote that: "The movie shows how an electron rides on a light wave after just having been pulled away from an atom." So I do not think that these are electrons around the nucleus. Am I write? If yes, I do not understand, where is the electron? Is it in the middle of the circles? And the light waves are the circles? Such clumsy descriptions make only confusions. Please give us precise detailes.

A bit later the authors wrote, that : "A stroboscope enables us to ‘freeze’ a periodic movement, like capturing a hummingbird flapping its wings." This suggests that several electrons can be seen on the video revolving around the nucleus. In that case where is the that single electron, that "just having been pulled away from the atom."

What you publish here, more than confusing. This is a horror. Would you be so kind as to clarify, what and where we can see on the video?

lol ur such a noob

It is quite common knowledge that electrons work in a sort of "cloud". They circle the nucleus, but in very erratic and LARGE circles. Much farther than the nucleus extends I believe. So yes, they go in circles, but indeterminable circles around an area MUCH larger than the nucleus, and orders of magnitude larger than the electron itself. The electron is carried (made visible) by light waves, pulses of super short, super strong laser light. They take the picture multiple times with multiple electrons, but all in the same position in space and all after having been separated from the electron cloud and the nucleus of the atom. This is the only way to capture a non "blurry" image of something moving so fast. I am assuming, as it honestly wasn't made that clear in the captions, that the electron is the circle inside of the "waves" which are caused by the attosecond pulses. This is great to study the true motion of electrons and compare their paths and motions to theories, and therefore confirm or re-write those theories to coincide with their findings. Why do you feel the need to rip on the author because YOU lack basic scientific knowledge?

I think many confuse electrons as cloud or particle or wave.This picture or video is a comp compiled improvisation and is an inpu consider that electorn can be sensed and its impact can be felt if it flows in a conduit of quantum tunnels.This is what is happening at nano-level or even at lower levels of of 10 to the power of minus 10.please clarify.Even with AFM or STM the video is only a computer improvisation, if the probabaility parameters have been applied tot he improvisation it may be a mathematical construct.We require a different technology to capture electrons.

I am actually horrified with the fundamental lack of understanding of quantum physics by the author of this article. Further, the "picture" of the electron is mapped in momentum space. This is no more of a "picture" than is an STM picture. The research is very interesting. But this article is really bad.

The electron is the circle inside of the "waves" which are caused by the attosecond pulses. This is great to study the true motion of electrons and compare their paths and motions to theories, and therefore confirm or re-write those theories to coincide with their findings.
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