|
Researchers
Produce Firsts with Bursts of Light
Tuesday, July 24, 2007
Team generates
most energetic terahertz pulses yet, observes useful optical
phenomena
Lead
author Yuzhen Shen (left) and NSLS researcher Larry Carr
Credit:
Brookhaven National Laboratory
|
Researchers at the U.S.
Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory have
generated extremely short pulses of light that are the strongest
of their type ever produced and could prove invaluable in probing
the ultra-fast motion of atoms and electrons. The scientists also
made the first observations of a phenomenon called cross-phase
modulation with this high-intensity light - a characteristic that
could be used in numerous new light source technologies.
The work, which was done at
Brookhaven's Source Development Laboratory, an offshoot of the
Lab's National Synchrotron Light Source (NSLS), is described
online in the July 23, 2007, edition of Physical Review Letters.
The light pulses used were in
the terahertz (THz) range of the broad electromagnetic spectrum,
found between the microwave and infrared range. Scientists send
tight bunches of electrons at nearly the speed of light through a
magnetic field to produce THz radiation at a trillion cycles per
second - the terahertz frequency that gives the light its name
and that makes them especially valuable for investigating
biological molecules and imaging, ranging from tumor detection to
homeland security.
The Brookhaven team is looking
to expand the potential uses for this type of light by increasing
the strength of individual THz pulses, a longtime goal for
scientists in the field. By slamming an electron beam from an
accelerator into an aluminum mirror, the researchers produced 100
megajoule (100 megawatt) single-cycle pulses - the highest energy
ever achieved to date with THz radiation. For comparison, 100
megawatts is about the output of a utility company's electrical
generator.
The combination of this
newfound strength with ultra-fast pulses provides researchers
with a powerful new tool to study the movement of a material's
electrons (which zip around at the femtosecond, or quadrillionth
of a second, timescale) or atoms (which move at the picosecond,
or trillionth of a second, timescale).
"The goal is really to
understand the properties of materials," said NSLS
researcher Yuzhen Shen, the lead author of the paper. "One
might ask what happens in a solid when light, electricity, or
sound goes through it, and it's all related to atoms in a crystal
wiggling around or the movement of electrons. So the effort
surrounding ultra-fast pulses is going into making tools to probe
the real fundamental properties of materials on the scales at
which they move."
Using this strong light,
researchers can "kick" molecular processes such as
catalysis or electronic switching (important for developing data
storage media) into action and watch their mechanisms on a very
short timescale.
The team also found something
surprising: the intensity of their THz pulses is so great that
they introduce so-called "nonlinear optical effects,"
specifically, a phenomenon known as cross-phase modulation.
"When you pull on a
spring, if you pull twice as hard, it stretches twice as much,"
said NSLS researcher Larry Carr. "But there's a limit where
if you pull twice as hard, the spring doesn't move anymore.
That's when it's called nonlinear. The same thing happens in
materials. You let these short pulses pass through a material,
and they stress it and pull some of the charges apart so they
don't act in a linear manner."
As a result, the researchers
can manipulate both the ultra-fast THz pulses and the material
they interact with. Some of the simplest examples include
changing the color of the light or turning the material into a
focusing lens.
This is the first time
cross-phase modulation has been observed in single-cycle THz
pulses. Learning how to control this characteristic could lead to
even more light source technologies.
This research was supported by
the Office of Basic Energy Sciences within the U.S. Department of
Energy's Office of Science, the Office of Naval Research, and
Brookhaven's Laboratory Directed R&D funds.
Source:
Brookhaven National Laboratory / Kendra Snyder

|