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Tuesday 7 February 2012

Richard: Atomic inner-shell X-ray laser at 1.46 nanometres pumped by an X-ray free-electron laser

Atomic inner-shell X-ray laser at 1.46 nanometres pumped by an X-ray free-electron laser

http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v481/n7382/abs/nature10721.html

Since the invention of the laser more than 50 years ago, scientists have striven to achieve amplification on atomic transitions of increasingly shorter wavelength1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. The introduction of X-ray free-electron lasers8, 9, 10makes it possible to pump new atomic X-ray lasers11, 12, 13 with ultrashort pulse duration, extreme spectral brightness and full temporal coherence. Here we describe the implementation of an X-ray laser in the kiloelectronvolt energy regime, based on atomic population inversion and driven by rapid K-shell photo-ionization using pulses from an X-ray free-electron laser. We established a population inversion of the Kα transition in singly ionized neon14at 1.46 nanometres (corresponding to a photon energy of 849 electronvolts) in an elongated plasma column created by irradiation of a gas medium. We observed strong amplified spontaneous emission from the end of the excited plasma. This resulted in femtosecond-duration, high-intensity X-ray pulses of much shorter wavelength and greater brilliance than achieved with previous atomic X-ray lasers. Moreover, this scheme provides greatly increased wavelength stability, monochromaticity and improved temporal coherence by comparison with present-day X-ray free-electron lasers. The atomic X-ray lasers realized here may be useful for high-resolution spectroscopy and nonlinear X-ray studies.


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