Strong inelastic scattering of slow electrons by optical near fields of
small nanoparticles
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2107.07504v1
- Date: Thu, 15 Jul 2021 17:57:58 GMT
- Title: Strong inelastic scattering of slow electrons by optical near fields of
small nanoparticles
- Authors: Germann Hergert, Andreas Woeste, Petra Gross, and Christoph Lienau
- Abstract summary: We study the inelastic scattering of slow electrons by near fields of small nanostructures.
For weak fields, this results in distinct angular diffraction patterns.
For stronger fields, scattering by the near-field component along the electron trajectory results in a break-up of the energy spectrum into multiple photon orders.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: The interaction of swift, free-space electrons with confined optical near
fields has recently sparked much interest. It enables a new type of
photon-induced near-field electron microscopy, mapping local optical near
fields around nanoparticles with exquisite spatial and spectral resolution and
lies at the heart of quantum state manipulation and attosecond pulse shaping of
free electrons. The corresponding interaction of optical near fields with slow
electrons has achieved much less attention, even though the lower electron
velocity may enhance electron-near-field coupling for small nanoparticles. A
first-principle theoretical study of such interactions has been reported very
recently [N. Talebi, Phys. Rev. Lett. 125, 080401 (2020)]. Building up on this
work, we investigate, both analytically and numerically, the inelastic
scattering of slow electrons by near fields of small nanostructures. For weak
fields, this results in distinct angular diffraction patterns that represent,
to first order, the Fourier transform of the transverse variation of the scalar
near-field potential along the direction perpendicular to the electron
propagation. For stronger fields, scattering by the near-field component along
the electron trajectory results in a break-up of the energy spectrum into
multiple photon orders. Their angular diffraction patterns are given by integer
powers of the Fourier transform of the transverse potential variation and are
shifting in phase with photon order. Our analytical model offers an efficient
approach for studying the effects of electron kinetic energy, near field shape
and strength on the diffraction and thus may facilitate the experimental
observation of these phenomena by, e.g., ultrafast low-energy point-projection
microscopy or related techniques. This could provide simultaneous access to
different vectorial components of the optical near fields of small
nanoparticles.
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