Partial Quantum Coherence, Ultrashort Electron Pulse Statistics, and a Plasmon-Enhanced Nanotip Emitter Based on Metallized Optical Fibers
Sam Keramati

TL;DR
This dissertation explores quantum coherence in ultrashort electron pulses, experimentally studies electron emission statistics, and introduces a plasmon-enhanced nanotip electron emitter based on metallized optical fibers, with potential for spin-polarized electron sources.
Contribution
It provides a theoretical analysis of quantum degeneracy in electron pulses, reports an experiment on electron antibunching, and characterizes a novel plasmon-assisted nanotip electron emitter.
Findings
Electron emission statistics are sub-Poissonian.
Gold-coated fiber tips can emit electrons via surface plasmon resonance.
The proposed spin-polarized emitter utilizes the spin Hall effect.
Abstract
The present dissertation covers two related research projects. The first topic was initiated with the ultimate goal of observing quantum degeneracy in ultrashort free electron pulses. This constitutes a thorough theoretical analysis of the problem involving partial quantum coherence and spin polarization of the source in light of a path-integral treatment of the phenomenon of matter-wave diffraction-in-time. Subsequently, results of a trailblazing experiment, to be superseded by a Hanbury Brown-Twiss type conclusive test of free fermion antibunching with electrons, is reported. In this experiment, the statistical distribution of the emitted electrons is studied taking advantage of a double-detector coincidence detection technique. The utilized electron emitters are ultrafast photoemission tungsten nanotip needle sources which are known to procure large spatial coherence lengths. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum and electron transport phenomena · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Laser-Matter Interactions and Applications
