Direct measurement of time-dependent density-density correlations in a solid through the acoustic analog of the dynamical Casimir effect
M. Trigo, M. Fuchs, J. Chen, M. P. Jiang, M. E. Kozina, G., Ndabashimiye, M. Cammarata, G. Chien, S. Fahy, D. M. Fritz, K. Gaffney, S., Ghimire, A. Higginbotham, S. L. Johnson, J. Larsson, H. Lemke, A. M., Lindenberg, F. Quirin, K. Sokolowski-Tinten, C. Uher, J. S. Wark, D. Zhu

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a novel method using femtosecond x-ray pulses to directly measure time-dependent density-density correlations in solids, revealing lattice excitations with high resolution through an acoustic analog of the dynamical Casimir effect.
Contribution
It introduces a new time-domain x-ray scattering technique to probe density correlations and lattice excitations in solids via an acoustic dynamical Casimir effect.
Findings
Direct measurement of density-density correlations in solids.
High-resolution spectroscopic information of lattice excitations.
Observation of phonon pairs generated by a femtosecond laser pulse.
Abstract
The macroscopic characteristics of a solid, such as its thermal, optical or transport properties are determined by the available microscopic states above its lowest energy level. These slightly higher quantum states are described by elementary excitations and dictate the response of the system under external stimuli. The spectrum of these excitations, obtained typically from inelastic neutron and x-ray scattering, is the spatial and temporal Fourier transform of the density-density correlation function of the system, which dictates how a perturbation propagates in space and time. As frequency-domain measurements do not generally contain phase information, time-domain measurements of these fluctuations could yield a more direct method for investigating the excitations of solids and their interactions both in equilibrium and far-from equilibrium. Here we show that the diffuse scattering…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Quantum, superfluid, helium dynamics
