4.7 Article

Free-electron shaping using quantum light

Journal

OPTICA
Volume 7, Issue 12, Pages 1820-1830

Publisher

OPTICAL SOC AMER
DOI: 10.1364/OPTICA.404598

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Funding

  1. Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad [MAT2017-88492-R, SEV2015-0522]
  2. European Research Council [789104-eNANO]
  3. Fundacion Cellex
  4. European Commission [713729]
  5. Centres de Recerca de Catalunya

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Controlling the wave function of free electrons is important to improve the spatial resolution of electron microscopes, the efficiency of electron interaction with sample modes of interest, and our ability to probe ultrafast materials dynamics at the nanoscale. In this context, attosecond electron compression has been recently demonstrated through interaction with the near fields created by scattering of ultrashort laser pulses at nanostructures followed by free-electron propagation. Here, we show that control over electron pulse shaping, compression, and statistics can be improved by replacing coherent laser excitation by interaction with quantum light. We find that compression is accelerated for fixed optical intensity by using phase-squeezed light, while amplitude squeezing produces ultrashort double-pulse profiles. The generated electron pulses exhibit periodic revivals in complete analogy to the opticalTalbot effect. We further reveal that the coherences created in a sample by interaction with the modulated electron are strongly dependent on the statistics of the modulating light, while the diagonal part of the sample density matrix reduces to a Poissonian distribution regardless of the type of light used to shape the electron. The present study opens a new direction toward the generation of free-electron pulses with additional control over duration, shape, and statistics, which directly affect their interaction with a sample. (C) 2020 Optical Society of America under the terms of the OSA Open Access Publishing Agreement

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