4.8 Article

Generation of electron beams carrying orbital angular momentum

Journal

NATURE
Volume 464, Issue 7289, Pages 737-739

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature08904

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All forms of waves can contain phase singularities(1-4). In the case of optical waves, a light beam with a phase singularity carries orbital angular momentum, and such beams have found a range of applications in optical manipulation, quantum information and astronomy(3-9). Here we report the generation of an electron beam with a phase singularity propagating in free space, which we achieve by passing a plane electron wave through a spiral phase plate constructed naturally from a stack of graphite thin films. The interference pattern between the final beam and a plane electron wave in a transmission electron microscope shows the 'Y'-like defect pattern characteristic of a beam carrying a phase singularity with a topological charge equal to one. This fundamentally new electron degree of freedom could find application in a number of research areas, as is the case for polarized electron beams.

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