Theoretical Atto-nano Physics
Marcelo F. Ciappina, Maciej Lewenstein

TL;DR
This paper provides a comprehensive theoretical overview of the emerging field of atto-nano physics, exploring how ultrashort laser pulses interact with nanoscale systems and affect electron dynamics and related phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces the theoretical tools to understand laser-matter interactions at the intersection of attosecond and nanoscale physics, highlighting the effects of spatially inhomogeneous fields.
Findings
Modified electron dynamics due to inhomogeneous fields
Impact on above-threshold ionization processes
Influence on high-order harmonic generation
Abstract
Two emerging areas of research, attosecond and nanoscale physics, have recently started to merge. Attosecond physics deals with phenomena occurring when ultrashort laser pulses, with duration on the femto- and sub-femtosecond time scales, interact with atoms, molecules or solids. The laser-induced electron dynamics occurs natively on a timescale down to a few hundred or even tens of attoseconds (1 attosecond=1 as=10 s), which is of the order of the optical field cycle. For comparison, the revolution of an electron on a orbital of a hydrogen atom is as. On the other hand, the second topic involves the manipulation and engineering of mesoscopic systems, such as solids, metals, and dielectrics, with nanometric precision. Although nano-engineering is a vast and well-established research field on its own, the combination with intense laser physics is relatively recent.…
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