World's shortest X-ray laser pulse created

Scientists have successfully created the world's shortest X-ray laser pulse with a duration of just 43 attoseconds, an advancement that will allow us to observe electrons in slow motion.
Image for representational purpose only.
Image for representational purpose only.

GENEVA: Scientists have successfully created the world's shortest X-ray laser pulse with a duration of just 43 attoseconds, an advancement that will allow us to observe electrons in slow motion.

In order to fully understand the dynamics during a chemical reaction, scientists must be able to study all movements of atoms and molecules on their basic time scale.

Molecules rotate in the range of picoseconds, their atoms vibrate in the range of femtoseconds, and the electrons move in the range of attoseconds.

Researchers from ETH Zurich in Switzerland succeeded in generating the world's shortest laser pulse with a duration of only 43 attoseconds.

This laser pulse is the shortest controlled event that has ever been created by humans. The researchers can now observe in high detail how electrons move within a molecule or how chemical bonds are formed.

Attosecond spectroscopy could contribute to the development of more efficient solar cells since it is now for the first time possible to follow the process of excitation through sunlight up to the generation of electricity step by step.

A detailed understanding of the charge transfer pathway could help optimize the efficiency of the next generation of photosensitive elements.

Attosecond laser spectroscopy is not only suitable for mere observation, said ETH professor Hans Jakob Worner.

Chemical reactions can also be directly manipulated.

Using a laser pulse can alter the course of a reaction – even chemical bonds can be broken by stopping the charge shift at a certain location in the molecule.

Such targeted interventions in chemical reactions have not been possible until now, since the time scale of electron movement in molecules was previously unreached.

The group of Worner is already working on the next generation of even shorter laser pulses.

These will make it possible to record even more detailed images, and thanks to a wider X-ray spectrum, even more elements can be probed than before. Soon it will be possible to follow the migration of electrons in more complex molecules with an even higher time resolution.

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