4.8 Article

Attosecond nonlinear polarization and light-matter energy transfer in solids

Journal

NATURE
Volume 534, Issue 7605, Pages 86-90

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature17650

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Max Planck Society
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft Cluster of Excellence: Munich Centre for Advanced Photonics
  3. Marie Curie International Outgoing Fellowship [FP7-PEOPLE-2011-IOF]
  4. European Community's Seventh Framework Programme [290605]
  5. Swiss National Science Foundation through NCCR MUST
  6. US Air Force Office of Scientific Research [FA9550-16-1-0073]
  7. RIKEN Advanced Institute for Computational Science through the HPCI System Research project [hp140103]
  8. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [15H03674, 14J01511] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Electric-field-induced charge separation (polarization) is the most fundamental manifestation of the interaction of light with matter and a phenomenon of great technological relevance. Nonlinear optical polarization(1,2) produces coherent radiation in spectral ranges inaccessible by lasers and constitutes the key to ultimate-speed signal manipulation. Terahertz techniques(3-8) have provided experimental access to this important observable up to frequencies of several terahertz(9-13). Here we demonstrate that attosecond metrology(14) extends the resolution to petahertz frequencies of visible light. Attosecond polarization spectroscopy allows measurement of the response of the electronic system of silica to strong (more than one volt per angstrom) few-cycle optical (about 750 nanometres) fields. Our proof-of-concept study provides time-resolved insight into the attosecond nonlinear polarization and the light-matter energy transfer dynamics behind the optical Kerr effect and multi-photon absorption. Timing the nonlinear polarization relative to the driving laser electric field with sub-30-attosecond accuracy yields direct quantitative access to both the reversible and irreversible energy exchange between visible-infrared light and electrons. Quantitative determination of dissipation within a signal manipulation cycle of only a few femtoseconds duration (by measurement and ab initio calculation) reveals the feasibility of dielectric optical switching at clock rates above 100 terahertz. The observed sub-femtosecond rise of energy transfer from the field to the material (for a peak electric field strength exceeding 2.5 volts per angstrom) in turn indicates the viability of petahertz-bandwidth metrology with a solid-state device.

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