Convergent-beam attosecond X-ray crystallography
Sub-angstrom spatial resolution of electron density coupled with sub-femtosecond temporal resolution is required to directly observe the dynamics of the electronic structure of a molecule after photoinitiation or some other ultrafast perturbation. Meeting this challenge, pushing the field of quantum...
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
17.09.2024
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Sub-angstrom spatial resolution of electron density coupled with
sub-femtosecond temporal resolution is required to directly observe the
dynamics of the electronic structure of a molecule after photoinitiation or
some other ultrafast perturbation. Meeting this challenge, pushing the field of
quantum crystallography to attosecond timescales, would bring insights into how
the electronic and nuclear degrees of freedom couple, enable the study of
quantum coherences involved in molecular dynamics, and ultimately enable these
dynamics to be controlled. Here we propose to reach this realm by employing
convergent-beam X-ray crystallography with high-power attosecond pulses from a
hard-X-ray free-electron laser. We show that with dispersive optics, such as
multilayer Laue lenses of high numerical aperture, it becomes possible to
encode time into the resulting diffraction pattern with deep sub-femtosecond
precision. Each snapshot diffraction pattern consists of Bragg streaks that can
be mapped back to arrival times and positions of X-rays on the face of a
crystal. This can span tens of femtoseconds, and can be finely sampled as we
demonstrate experimentally. The approach brings several other advantages, such
as an increase of the number of observable reflections in a snapshot
diffraction pattern, all fully integrated, to improve the speed and accuracy of
serial crystallography -- especially for crystals of small molecules. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2409.11127 |