Structured free-space optical fields for transverse and longitudinal control of electron matter waves
Sven Ebel, Nahid Talebi

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the coherent control of free-electron momentum states using structured laser beams, enabling precise manipulation of electron energy and momentum for advanced microscopy and material probing.
Contribution
It extends the Kapitza-Dirac effect to structured pulsed laser beams, allowing simultaneous longitudinal and transverse phase control of electron wavepackets with inelastic and elastic scattering.
Findings
Formation of distinct electron transverse momentum orders
Observation of a comb-like electron energy spectrum
Controlled population of electron energy-momentum states
Abstract
Controlling free-electron momentum states is of high interest in electron microscopy to achieve momentum and energy resolved probing and manipulation of physical systems. Free-electron and light interactions have emerged as a powerful technique to accomplish this. Here, we demonstrate both longitudinal and transverse phase control of a slow electron wavepacket by extending the Kapitza-Dirac effect to spatially-structured pulsed laser beams. This extension enables both inelastic and elastic stimulated Compton scattering. The interaction reveals the formation of distinct electron transverse momentum orders, each demonstrating a comb-like electron energy spectrum. By exerting complete control over light parameters, including wavelength, field intensity, pulse duration, and spatial mode order, as well as their combinations, it is possible to coherently control the population of these…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLaser Design and Applications · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Mechanical and Optical Resonators
