Coherent regime of Kapitza-Dirac effect with electrons
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2511.14508v1
- Date: Tue, 18 Nov 2025 13:59:25 GMT
- Title: Coherent regime of Kapitza-Dirac effect with electrons
- Authors: Kamila Moriová, Petr Koutenský, Neli Laštovičková Streshkova, Marius Constantin Chirita Mihaila, Zbyněk Šobáň, Jaromír Kopeček, Andreas Schertel, Martin Kozák,
- Abstract summary: We report on the observation of the Kapitza-Dirac effect in a scanning electron microscope.<n>The photon sidebands in the electron transverse momentum spectrum are detected in the convergent beam diffraction geometry.<n>The effect can serve as a coherent electron beam-splitter or a phase-plate in various types of electron microscopes.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: Electron matter waves coherently diffract when passing through a periodic structure of light formed by two interfering light waves. In this so-called Kapitza-Dirac effect, the electron momentum changes due to absorption and emission of photons via stimulated Compton scattering. Until now, the effect has only been observed with low energy electrons due to the small momentum of a visible photon compared to the momentum of high energy electron leading to diffraction angles of 10^(-4) rad or smaller. We report on the observation of the Kapitza-Dirac effect in a scanning electron microscope using high energy (20 keV and 30 keV) electrons with de-Broglie wavelengths of 9 pm and 7 pm, respectively. The photon sidebands in the electron transverse momentum spectrum are detected in the convergent beam diffraction geometry using spatial filtering. As the coupling strength between the electrons and the light field increases, the sideband populations exhibit coherent, reversible oscillations among diffraction orders. The effect can serve as a coherent electron beam-splitter or a phase-plate in various types of electron microscopes.
Related papers
- Experimental Verification of Electron-Photon Entanglement [39.58317527488534]
Entanglement, a key resource of emerging quantum technologies, describes correlations between particles that defy classical physics.<n>We demonstrate entanglement in electron-photon pairs generated via cathodoluminescence in a transmission electron microscope.<n>Our work paves the way for exploring quantum correlations in free-electron systems and their application to quantum-enhanced imaging techniques on the nanoscale.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2025-04-17T17:58:50Z) - Direct Measurement of the Singlet Lifetime and Photoexcitation Behavior of the Boron Vacancy Center in Hexagonal Boron Nitride [31.114245664719455]
Electronic spin defects in van der Waals (vdW) materials provide a promising platform for quantum sensing.<n>Here, we use time-resolved photoluminescence (PL) measurements with a nanosecond rise-time nm laser to determine the singlet state lifetime of a $V-_B$ ensemble in neutron-irradiated, sub-micron-size flakes of hBN.<n>We probe the PL dynamics of thermal and optically polarized electronic spin distributions of the $V-_B$ ensemble in a single sub-micron hBN flake, and fit our results to
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2025-04-07T17:42:43Z) - Exploring single-photon recoil on free electrons [36.136619420474766]
We present experimental investigations of energy-momentum conservation and the corresponding dispersion relation on the single particle level, achieved through coincidence detection of electron-photon pairs.
This not only enables unprecedented clarity in detecting weak signals otherwise obscured by non-radiative processes but also provides a new experimental pathway to explore entanglement within electron-photon pairs.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-09-18T16:45:17Z) - Structured free-space optical fields for transverse and longitudinal control of electron matter waves [0.0]
Controlling free-electron momentum states is of high interest in electron microscopy to achieve momentum and energy resolved probing and manipulation of physical systems.
Here, we demonstrate both longitudinal and transverse phase control of a slow electron wavepacket by extending the Kapitza-Dirac effect to spatially-structured pulsed laser beams.
The interaction reveals the formation of distinct electron transverse momentum orders, each demonstrating a comb-like electron energy spectrum.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-04-05T16:00:39Z) - Multimode Ultrastrong Coupling in Three-Dimensional Photonic-Crystal Cavities [36.212701687134064]
One-dimensional photonic-crystal cavities have uniform spatial profiles in the lateral plane.
Fabrication challenges have hindered the achievement of strong coupling in 3D-PCCs.
We report the realization of multimode ultrastrong coupling in a 3D-PCC at terahertz frequencies.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-08-23T21:14:01Z) - Inelastic Electron Scattering at a Single-Beam Structured Light Wave [0.0]
We demonstrate the inelastic scattering of slow-electron wavepackets at a propagating Hermite-Gaussian light beam.
This effect opens up a new platform for manipulating the electron wavepacket by utilizing the vast landscape of structured electromagnetic fields.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-12-20T14:04:22Z) - Quantum interaction of sub-relativistic aloof electrons with mesoscopic
samples [91.3755431537592]
Relativistic electrons experience very slight wave packet distortion and negligible momentum recoil when interacting with nanometer-sized samples.
Modelling fast electrons as classical point-charges provides extremely accurate theoretical predictions of energy-loss spectra.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-11-14T15:22:37Z) - Self-trapping of slow electrons in the energy domain [0.0]
We show that slow electrons are subject to strong confinement in the energy domain due to the non-vanishing curvature of the electron dispersion.
The spectral trap is tunable and an appropriate choice of light field parameters can reduce the interaction dynamics to only two energy states.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-09-29T15:07:11Z) - Coulomb-correlated electron number states in a transmission electron
microscope beam [0.0]
Event-based electron spectroscopy allows a spatial and spectral characterization of the electron ensemble emitted by each laser pulse.
We identify distinctive energy and momentum correlations arising from acceleration-enhanced interparticle energy exchange.
We observe field-controllable electron antibunching, attributed primarily to transverse Coulomb deflection.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-09-25T19:08:09Z) - Near-monochromatic tuneable cryogenic niobium electron field emitter [48.7576911714538]
We describe electron field emission from a monocrystalline, superconducting niobium nanotip at a temperature of 5.9 K.
The emitted electron energy spectrum reveals an ultra-narrow distribution down to 16 meV.
This source will decrease the impact of lens aberration and enable new modes in low-energy electron microscopy, electron energy loss spectroscopy, and high-resolution vibrational spectroscopy.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-05-11T20:46:21Z) - Free-Electron Shaping Using Quantum Light [0.0]
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 optical Talbot effect.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-08-03T15:35:43Z) - Resonant high-energy bremsstrahlung of ultrarelativistic electrons in
the field of a nucleus and a pulsed light wave [68.8204255655161]
Research investigates the resonant high-energy spontaneous bremsstrahlung of ultrarelativistic electrons with considerable energies in the field of a nucleus and a quasimonochromatic laser wave.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-04-05T16:27:11Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.