Control of quantum electrodynamical processes by shaping electron
wavepackets
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2011.00714v1
- Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2020 04:01:09 GMT
- Title: Control of quantum electrodynamical processes by shaping electron
wavepackets
- Authors: Liang Jie Wong, Nicholas Rivera, Chitraang Murdia, Thomas Christensen,
John D. Joannopoulos, Marin Solja\v{c}i\'c and Ido Kaminer
- Abstract summary: We show that free-electron wave-shaping can be used to engineer quantum interferences that alter the results of scattering processes in quantum electrodynamical processes.
As an example, we apply our concept to Bremsstrahlung, a ubiquitous phenomenon that occurs in X-ray sources for state-of-the-art medical imaging.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: Fundamental quantum electrodynamical (QED) processes such as spontaneous
emission and electron-photon scattering encompass a wealth of phenomena that
form one of the cornerstones of modern science and technology. Conventionally,
calculations in QED and in other field theories assume that incoming particles
are single-momentum states. The possibility that coherent superposition states,
i.e. "shaped wavepackets", will alter the result of fundamental scattering
processes is thereby neglected, and is instead assumed to sum to an incoherent
(statistical) distribution in the incoming momentum. Here, we show that
free-electron wave-shaping can be used to engineer quantum interferences that
alter the results of scattering processes in QED. Specifically, the
interference of two or more pathways in a QED process (such as photon emission)
enables precise control over the rate of that process. As an example, we apply
our concept to Bremsstrahlung, a ubiquitous phenomenon that occurs, for
instance, in X-ray sources for state-of-the-art medical imaging, security
scanning, materials analysis, and astrophysics. We show that free electron
wave-shaping can be used to tailor both the spatial and the spectral
distribution of emitted photons, enhancing their directionality and
monochromaticity, and adding more degrees of freedom that make emission
processes like Bremsstrahlung more versatile. The ability to tailor the
spatiotemporal attributes of photon emission via quantum interference provides
a new degree of freedom in shaping radiation across the entire electromagnetic
spectrum. More broadly, the ability to tailor general QED processes through the
shaping of free electrons opens up new avenues of control in processes ranging
from optical excitation processes (e.g., plasmon and phonon emission) in
electron microscopy to free electron lasing in the quantum regime.
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