GSTDTAP  > 气候变化
DOI10.1126/science.abf1406
Snapshots of a light-triggered transition
Anshul Kogar
2021-01-22
发表期刊Science
出版年2021
英文摘要In an iconic 1964 photo of a bullet piercing an apple, Harold “Doc” Edgerton captured a snapshot that took a mere millionth of a second ([ 1 ][1]). The same working principle behind his highspeed images have been adopted today to study the evolution of ordered states of matter after excitation by extremely short light pulses. To trace the time evolution of these ordered states after excitation, in which the atoms move on the femto- to pico second time scale (10−12 to 10−15 s), images need to be taken with both extraordinary temporal and spatial resolution. On page 371 of this issue, Danz et al. ([ 2 ][2]) show that this goal can be accomplished using time-resolved dark-field electron microscopy by obtaining real-space snapshots of a charge density wave phase transition triggered with pulses of light. The famous high-speed photos taken by Doc Edgerton help us to understand how these experiments were carried out (see the figure). This image is captured after a drop lands in an otherwise quiescent pool of milk ([ 3 ][3]). Taking these kinds of photos, which Edgerton started pursuing in the 1930s, required ingenuity, because shutter speeds even on most modern cameras are only in the millisecond range. Edgerton, an early innovator in electronic flashtube technology, simply turned off the lights in the room and used a microsecond flash to capture the images at a particular instant. Despite the long camera exposure, light is only captured at the instant of the flash. As long as the perturbing drop (the “pump”) is appropriately synchronized with the flash (the “probe”), the result is a perfectly timed snapshot. To synchronize the events, the drop falling from a pipette triggers an electronic circuit that is used to delay the flash precisely to the moment that the drop hits the pool. By electronically delaying the time between the pump and probe events, a sequence of images can be captured to illustrate the splash evolving in time . Using this method, each photo in a sequence is actually captured with different milk drops. Thus, a sequence of images patched together is not a “movie” in the truest sense, but so long as the event is repeatable, a movie can be meaningfully constructed. Capturing the evolution of the milk drop disturbing the pool away from its quiescent equilibrium state inspires those today who use the pump-probe technique. ![Figure][4] Capturing fast physics in a flash This famous image from Harold Edgerton (below) was captured on the microsecond time scale using a synchronized electronic flashtube. Analogously, the evolution of a charge density wave transition is captured on the picosecond scale (right) with time-resolved dark-field imaging in an electron microscope. PHOTO (LEFT): H. EDGERTON/SCIENCE SOURCE; (SERIES ON RIGHT) DANZ ET AL./SCIENCE Before the advent of pump-probe spectroscopy, states of matter were studied at, or very close to, thermal equilibrium. Studies of glass provide a counterpoint, but the time evolution for glasses is extremely slow. In the past two decades, building on advances in laser technology, the first glimpses have begun into how ordered states evolve on femtosecond time scales after being driven far from equilibrium with intense light pulses. Major goals of this enterprise are to use the light pulses to manipulate and control existing states of matter and to discover different ones that do not exist under equilibrium conditions. For example, prior studies have hinted that light pulses can substantially raise transition temperatures in molecular superconductors ([ 4 ][5], [ 5 ][6]) and that pulses can create quantum mechanical hybrid photon-electron states, so-called Floquet-Bloch states, in insulating materials ([ 6 ][7], [ 7 ][8]). Because of the extreme conditions to which matter is subjected in these experiments, some of the most basic and prized experimental probes are unusable. Even measurements of the electrical resistivity, perhaps the most run-of-the-mill among probes of near-equilibrium matter, become monumentally difficult to perform on the femtosecond time scale. Thus, attention has shifted to expanding the experimental repertoire to better capture the far-from-equilibrium dynamics of ordered matter in pursuit of what happens on extremely short time scales. Only in the past 10 to 15 years have methods such as time- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy ([ 7 ][8], [ 8 ][9]) and ultrafast electron scattering ([ 9 ][10]–[ 11 ][11]) matured to present us with meaningful insights into condensed phases of matter. Danz et al. substantially boost our experimental arsenal by capturing real-space images of the spatiotemporal order parameter dynamics during a light-triggered phase transition. They take snapshots, in the manner of Doc Edgerton, of charge density wave material 1 T -TaS2 (see the figure). A charge density wave is an ordered state that gives rise, among other phenomena, to a periodic lattice distortion. In the authors' experiment, a femtosecond light pulse melts this density wave locally, and over time, the sample returns to its distorted state. Images in their scheme are captured by using electron pulses in a conventional transmission electron microscope, but the authors spearhead two advances. They use an inhomogeneous light excitation to melt the density wave in specific regions within their field of view. And instead of exposing the camera to all scattered electrons from the sample, they design a sample-specific, tailor-made mask to collect only diffraction peaks from the density wave. Imaging just these diffraction peaks—so-called dark-field imaging—allows the authors to watch how the vaporized regions interact with each other, shrink, and eventually recondense into the charge density wave state. These never-before-seen images will inspire others to come up with schemes that do not require the use of the tailor-made mask, which currently prohibits the technique from being adopted more widely. The future will no doubt see strategies for masking “dynamically” and applying the method more systematically across materials. Had Doc Edgerton been alive to watch the kinds of movies directed today by those pursuing studies of far-from-equilibrium physics, we imagine that they would evoke in him both awe and a nostalgic flashback. 1. [↵][12]1. H. E. Edgerton , Bullet Through Apple (MIT Museum, 1964). 2. [↵][13]1. T. Danz, 2. T. Domröse, 3. C. Ropers , Science 371, 371 (2021). [OpenUrl][14][Abstract/FREE Full Text][15] 3. [↵][16]1. H. E. Edgerton , Birth of the Milk Drop (National Gallery of Australia, 1934). 4. [↵][17]1. M. Mitrano et al ., Nature 530, 461 (2016). [OpenUrl][18][CrossRef][19][PubMed][20] 5. [↵][21]1. M. Buzzi et al ., Phys. Rev. X 10, 031028 (2020). [OpenUrl][22] 6. [↵][23]1. Y. H. Wang et al ., Science 342, 453 (2013). [OpenUrl][24][Abstract/FREE Full Text][25] 7. [↵][26]1. F. Mahmood et al ., Nat. Phys. 12, 306 (2016). [OpenUrl][27] 8. [↵][28]1. F. Schmitt et al ., Science 321, 1649 (2008). [OpenUrl][29][Abstract/FREE Full Text][30] 9. [↵][31]1. M. Eichberger et al ., Nature 468, 799 (2010). [OpenUrl][32][CrossRef][33][PubMed][34][Web of Science][35] 10. 1. M. J. Stern et al ., Phys. Rev. B 97, 165416 (2018). [OpenUrl][36] 11. [↵][37]1. A. Kogar et al ., Nat. Phys. 16, 159 (2020). 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领域气候变化 ; 资源环境
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条目标识符http://119.78.100.173/C666/handle/2XK7JSWQ/312351
专题气候变化
资源环境科学
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Anshul Kogar. Snapshots of a light-triggered transition[J]. Science,2021.
APA Anshul Kogar.(2021).Snapshots of a light-triggered transition.Science.
MLA Anshul Kogar."Snapshots of a light-triggered transition".Science (2021).
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