Atomic inner-shell laser at 1.5-ångström wavelength pumped by an X-ray free-electron laser
Author(s) -
Hitoki Yoneda,
Yuichi Inubushi,
Kazunori Nagamine,
Yurina Michine,
Haruhiko Ohashi,
Hirokatsu Yumoto,
Kazuto Yamauchi,
Hidekazu Mimura,
Hikaru Kitamura,
Tetsuo Katayama,
Tetsuya Ishikawa,
Makina Yabashi
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
nature
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 15.993
H-Index - 1226
eISSN - 1476-4687
pISSN - 0028-0836
DOI - 10.1038/nature14894
Subject(s) - laser , wavelength , optics , free electron model , x ray laser , atomic physics , ultrashort pulse , laser pumping , physics , laser power scaling , materials science
Since the invention of the first lasers in the visible-light region, research has aimed to produce short-wavelength lasers that generate coherent X-rays; the shorter the wavelength, the better the imaging resolution of the laser and the shorter the pulse duration, leading to better temporal resolution in probe measurements. Recently, free-electron lasers based on self-amplified spontaneous emission have made it possible to generate a hard-X-ray laser (that is, the photon energy is of the order of ten kiloelectronvolts) in an ångström-wavelength regime, enabling advances in fields from ultrafast X-ray spectrosopy to X-ray quantum optics. An atomic laser based on neon atoms and pumped by a soft-X-ray (that is, a photon energy of less than one kiloelectronvolt) free-electron laser has been achieved at a wavelength of 14 nanometres. Here, we use a copper target and report a hard-X-ray inner-shell atomic laser operating at a wavelength of 1.5 ångströms. X-ray free-electron laser pulses with an intensity of about 10(19) watts per square centimetre tuned to the copper K-absorption edge produced sufficient population inversion to generate strong amplified spontaneous emission on the copper Kα lines. Furthermore, we operated the X-ray free-electron laser source in a two-colour mode, with one colour tuned for pumping and the other for the seed (starting) light for the laser.
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