404. Wilhelm and Else Heraeus-Seminar

Europe/Berlin
Physikzentrum Bad Honnef

Physikzentrum Bad Honnef

Hauptstraße 5 D-53604 Bad Honnef
Edgar Weckert , Gerhard Grübel , Ivan Vartaniants
Description
"Matter in Coherent Light" While the coherence properties of visible light lasers are nowadays not only used for scientific experiments but are meanwhile applied also in every day life, the exploitation of coherent photon beams at higher photon energies, especially in the X-ray regime, has been hampered by the availability of suitable sources. However, new third generation synchrotron radiation sources provide a considerable flux of coherent photons also in the X-ray regime. This is due to their small source sizes which are in the 10 to 100 micrometer range and the large source to sample distances of typically about 40 to 100 m. The corresponding transverse coherence lengths are already in the 10 micrometer range. A totally new world in terms of coherence properties for photon beams in the VUV/XUV and X-ray energy range has been opened up by free electron lasers (FELs) which are almost completely coherent in the transverse direction. The FLASH FEL Facility is already operating in the VUV/XUV range (up to 200eV photon energy) at DESY, Hamburg. Free electron lasers providing coherent beams also in the keV photon energy range are under construction (LCLS at SLAC, Stanford, SCCS at Spring8, Japan) or in the final planning stage (European XFEL at DESY Hamburg). In addition to the coherence properties, these new FELs combine some other radiation properties like extremely short and intense photon pulses. The measured photon pulse length at the FLASH facility is about 20-30 fs at 13 nm wavelength. Generally speaking, such a FEL source provides roughly the same number of photons in one 20-100 fs pulse as a modern synchrotron radiation source does in one second. These properties will enable a wealth of new experiments to explore the static and dynamic properties of matter at both very short time scales and atomic resolution. Widely applied at new third generations synchrotron radiation sources are X-ray correlation spectroscopy (XPCS) techniques to study the dynamic properties of matter on the nanoscale in a time – Q-vector range that is not accessible by other methods. The study of fast (t << 1 microsecond) dynamics (at large momentum transfers Q) was up to now restricted to the energy domain (inelastic) techniques. With the new FEL sources one will be able to study fast dynamics in the time domain which is of outmost importance for a variety of phenomena e.g. for non-equilibrium dynamics. One will start in the short term with existing synchrotron sources but then focus on the use of PETRA III (from 2009), LCLS from 2010 and the XFEL from 2012/13. The expected high degree of coherence will give access furthermore to non-gaussian dynamics in complex fluids and other phenomena. Novel, coherence preserving optics coupled with fast 2-D detectors will be mandatory for the success of these projects. The properties of these sources are particularly well suited to unravel the structure of nanoscopic objects via lensless and other imaging techniques requiring coherent radiation. In principle, the achievable resolution of the newly developing lensless imaging techniques is only limited by the maximum achievable Q-vector modulus. Since the method works in the far field, mechanical stability issues of the set up are less critical than in other imaging methods. However, in order to solve the phase problem upon inversion, the diffraction image has to be sufficiently over-sampled. This technique is rapidly developing at present and there are still a number of critical questions that are under discussion. Other imaging techniques exploiting the coherence properties of X-ray beams like phase contrast microtomography or holo-tomography are more developed but on several aspects active research is also still onging in this field. Compared to complementary imaging techniques like electron microscopy or light microscopy, coherent X-ray imaging has the advantage of being able to provide true three-dimensional information also of opaque objects thicker than several micrometers due to the penetration properties of the radiation. The ultimate long-term goal for diffraction imaging is “Single Particle Imaging”, e.g. the structural investigation of single non-translation periodic biological nano-objects using coherent X-rays from future XFELs. The route to such a structure determination at highest possible spatial resolution is difficult and needs to address complex issues like handling and orientation of nano objects, control of radiation damage, achievement of short (<100 fs) pulse lengths, improved reconstruction mechanisms to overcome the phase-problem, etc., which only can be solved in a multi disciplinary approach. In the near future these issues will be addressed in a modular fashion in the short and medium term e.g. by operating with larger objects at novel synchrotron radiation sources (e.g. PETRA III) and at longer wavelengths at FLASH Facilty. external link Wilhelm und Else Heraeus Stiftung
List of Posters
Program
    • 1
      Basics about Coherence
      Speaker: Bruno Lengeler
    • 2
      Theory of Coherence: Coherence properties of light, phase retrieval from intensities
      Speaker: Keith Nugent
      Abstract
    • 10:00
      Coffee break
    • 3
      Coherence properties of FEL light available at SCSS
      Speaker: T. Shintake
      Abstract
    • 4
      Coherence properties of the radiation from x-ray free electron lasers
      Speaker: Mikhail Yurkov
      Abstract
    • 12:00
      Lunch break
    • 5
      Time-resolved diffraction using femtosecond laser-plasma-based X-ray sources
      Speaker: Klaus Sokolowski-Tinten
      Abstract
    • 6
      High Harmonic Generation: An ultrafast coherent source
      Speaker: John Tisch
      Abstract
    • 15:30
      Coffee break
    • 7
      Recent developments at the FLASH facility
      Speaker: Josef Feldhaus
      Abstract
    • 8
      Generation and application of coherent EUV and soft x-ray radiation
      Speaker: David Attwood
      Abstract
    • 9
      Diffractive X-Ray Optics for Microscopy and Radiography Applications
      Speaker: Christian David
      Abstract
    • 10
      Wave-Optical Properties of Refractive X-Ray Lenses
      Speaker: Christian Schroer
    • 11
      Coherent Diffraction Optics for VUV and X-Rays
      Speaker: Alexei Erko
      Abstract
    • 10:00
      Coffee break
    • 12
      Imaging Basics
      Speaker: Janos Kirz
      Abstract
    • 13
      XPCS from Surfaces and Interfaces
      Speaker: Metin Tolan
      Abstract
    • 12:00
      Lunch break
    • 14
      Photon correlation spectroscopy with visible light
      Speaker: Peter Pusey
      Abstract
    • 15
      Non-equilibrium Dynamics of Cu3Au
      Speaker: Mark Sutton
      Abstract
    • 15:30
      Coffee break
    • Talks of PhD students and PostDocs
    • 16
      Coherent X-ray Diffraction Microscopy Applied to Nanoscience and Biology
      Speaker: John Miao
      Abstract
    • 17
      Coherent X-ray Diffraction Images of Nanowires
      Speaker: Ian Robinson
      Abstract
    • 10:00
      Coffee break
    • 18
      Recent studies of fluctuations in polymer films using XPCS
      Speaker: Sunny Sinha
      Abstract
    • 19
      Viscoelastic properties of gels and glassy matter studied by XPCS
      Speaker: Anders Madsen
      Abstract
    • 12:00
      Lunch break
    • 20
      Partial coherence in ptychographical lensless image reconstruction
      Speaker: John Rodenburg
      Abstract
    • 21
      The FEL detector challenge and one possible solution to it
      Speaker: Heinz Graafsma
      Abstract
    • 15:30
      Coffee break
    • 22
      High speed spectroscopic imaging of X-rays from 100 eV to 25 keV
      Speaker: Lothar Strüder
      Abstract
    • 23
      Future detector technologies for FEL radiation
      Speaker: R. Horisberger
    • 24
      Coherent X-ray Microscopy & Lensless Imaging
      Speaker: Franz Pfeiffer
      Abstract
    • 25
      X-Ray Holography
      Speaker: Stefan Eisebitt
      Abstract
    • 10:00
      Coffee break
    • 26
      X-ray imaging techniques exploiting the coherence properties of light
      Speaker: Peter Cloetens
      Abstract
    • 27
      Diffractive imaging using coherent photon pulses from FELs
      Speaker: Henry Chapman
    • 12:00
      Lunch break
    • 28
      CCoherent ultracold matter
      Speaker: A. Hemmerich
      Abstract
    • 29
      The European x-ray free-electron laser project in Hamburg
      Speaker: Massimo Altarelli
      Abstract