scholarly journals Spatio-temporal shaping of a free-electron wave function via coherent light–electron interaction

Author(s):  
Giovanni Maria Vanacore ◽  
Ivan Madan ◽  
Fabrizio Carbone

AbstractThe past decade has witnessed a quantum revolution in the field of computation, communication and materials investigation. A similar revolution is also occurring for free-electron based techniques, where the classical treatment of a free electron as a point particle is being surpassed toward a deeper exploitation of its quantum nature. Adopting familiar concepts from quantum optics, several groups have demonstrated temporal and spatial shaping of a free-electron wave function, developing theoretical descriptions of light-modulated states, as well as predicting and confirming fascinating phenomena as attosecond self-compression and orbital angular momentum transfer from light to electrons. In this review, we revisit the milestones of this development and the several methods adopted for imprinting a time-varying phase modulation on an electron wave function using properly synthesized ultrafast light fields, making the electron an exquisitely selective probe of out-of-equilibrium phenomena in individual atomic/nanoscale systems. We discuss both longitudinal and transverse phase manipulation of free-electrons, where coherent quantized exchanges of energy, linear momentum and orbital angular momentum mediating the electron–light coupling are key in determining their spatio-temporal redistribution. Spatio-temporal phase shaping of matter waves provides new routes toward image-resolution enhancement, selective probing, dynamic control of materials, new quantum information methods, and exploration of electronic motions and nuclear phenomena. Emerging as a new field, electron wave function shaping allows adopting familiar quantum optics concepts in composite-particle experiments and paves the way for atomic, ionic and nuclear wave function engineering with perspective applications in atomic interferometry and direct control of nuclear processes.

1997 ◽  
Vol 106 (1) ◽  
pp. 182-194 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. S. Op de Beek ◽  
J. P. J. Driessen ◽  
H. C. W. Beijerinck ◽  
B. J. Verhaar

2012 ◽  
pp. 314-329
Author(s):  
J. Romero ◽  
D. Giovannini ◽  
S. Franke-Arnold ◽  
M. J. Padgett

2014 ◽  
Vol 144 ◽  
pp. 26-31 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roy Shiloh ◽  
Yossi Lereah ◽  
Yigal Lilach ◽  
Ady Arie

Author(s):  
Benjamin J. McMorran ◽  
Amit Agrawal ◽  
Peter A. Ercius ◽  
Vincenzo Grillo ◽  
Andrew A. Herzing ◽  
...  

The surprising message of Allen et al. (Allen et al. 1992 Phys. Rev. A 45 , 8185 ( doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.45.8185 )) was that photons could possess orbital angular momentum in free space, which subsequently launched advancements in optical manipulation, microscopy, quantum optics, communications, many more fields. It has recently been shown that this result also applies to quantum mechanical wave functions describing massive particles (matter waves). This article discusses how electron wave functions can be imprinted with quantized phase vortices in analogous ways to twisted light, demonstrating that charged particles with non-zero rest mass can possess orbital angular momentum in free space. With Allen et al. as a bridge, connections are made between this recent work in electron vortex wave functions and much earlier works, extending a 175 year old tradition in matter wave vortices. This article is part of the themed issue ‘Optical orbital angular momentum’.


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