Attosecond control of electrons emitted from a nanoscale metal tip
Michael Kr\"uger, Markus Schenk, Peter Hommelhoff

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates attosecond control of electron emission from a nanoscale tungsten tip using carrier-envelope phase, enabling high-repetition-rate ultrafast electron experiments and opening new avenues for solid-state attosecond science.
Contribution
It presents the first observation of carrier-envelope phase-dependent electron emission from a solid nanoscale tip, with implications for ultrafast electron control in solids.
Findings
Achieved up to 100% carrier-envelope phase-dependent current modulation.
Controlled electron emission from one or two sub-500 as instances within a 6 fs pulse.
Demonstrated coherent elastic re-scattering of electrons at the metal surface.
Abstract
Attosecond science is based on steering of electrons with the electric field of well-controlled femtosecond laser pulses. It has led to, for example, the generation of XUV light pulses with a duration in the sub-100-attosecond regime, to the measurement of intra-molecular dynamics by diffraction of an electron taken from the molecule under scrutiny, and to novel ultrafast electron holography. All these effects have been observed with atoms or molecules in the gas phase. Although predicted to occur, a strong light-phase sensitivity of electrons liberated by few-cycle laser pulses from solids has hitherto been elusive. Here we show a carrier-envelope (C-E) phase-dependent current modulation of up to 100% recorded in spectra of electrons laser-emitted from a nanometric tungsten tip. Controlled by the C-E phase, electrons originate from either one or two sub-500as long instances within the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
