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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Optical Excitations with Electron Beams: Challenges and Opportunities.

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TLDR
In this paper, it was shown that the excitation probability by a single electron is independent of its wave function, apart from a classical average over the transverse beam density profile, whereas the probability for two or more modulated electrons depends on their relative spatial arrangement, thus reflecting the quantum nature of their interactions.
Abstract
Free electron beams such as those employed in electron microscopes have evolved into powerful tools to investigate photonic nanostructures with an unrivaled combination of spatial and spectral precision through the analysis of electron energy losses and cathodoluminescence light emission. In combination with ultrafast optics, the emerging field of ultrafast electron microscopy utilizes synchronized femtosecond electron and light pulses that are aimed at the sampled structures, holding the promise to bring simultaneous sub-Angstrom--sub-fs--sub-meV space-time-energy resolution to the study of material and optical-field dynamics. In addition, these advances enable the manipulation of the wave function of individual free electrons in unprecedented ways, opening sound prospects to probe and control quantum excitations at the nanoscale. Here, we provide an overview of photonics research based on free electrons, supplemented by original theoretical insights, and discussion of challenges and opportunities. In particular, we show that the excitation probability by a single electron is independent of its wave function, apart from a classical average over the transverse beam density profile, whereas the probability for two or more modulated electrons depends on their relative spatial arrangement, thus reflecting the quantum nature of their interactions. We derive first-principles analytical expressions that embody these results and have general validity for arbitrarily shaped electrons and any type of electron-sample interaction. We conclude with perspectives on various exciting directions for disruptive approaches to non-invasive spectroscopy and microscopy, the possibility of sampling the nonlinear optical response at the nanoscale, the manipulation of the density matrices associated with free electrons and optical sample modes, and applications in optical modulation of electron beams.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Free-Electron Shaping Using Quantum Light

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that for fixed optical intensity, phase-squeezed light can be used to accelerate the compression of free electron pulses, while amplitude squeezing produces ultrashort double-pulse profiles.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Superradiant Smith-Purcell Emission

TL;DR: A diffraction grating mounted in the electron beam focal region of a scanning electron microscope has been used to produce superradiant emission over the 300--900 $\ensuremath{\mu}\mathrm{m}$ wavelength range as discussed by the authors.
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All-optical control and metrology of electron pulses

TL;DR: An ultrafast optics approach for generating bunches of electrons and compressing them by more than an order of magnitude to just femtosecond time scales is described, opening up the possibility of imaging ultrafast phenomena with atomic-scale spatial resolution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relativistic electron energy loss and electron-induced photon emission in inhomogeneous dielectrics

TL;DR: In this paper, the exact solution of Maxwell's equations is reduced to self-consistent equations involving integrals over the interfaces, and the particular case of axially symmetric interfaces of arbitrary shape is discussed in detail.
Journal ArticleDOI

Photon-induced near-field electron microscopy (PINEM): theoretical and experimental

TL;DR: Barwick et al. as discussed by the authors studied the photon-induced near-field electron microscopy (PINEM) and predicted the associated phenomena of, e.g., forty-photon absorption by the electron packet.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diffraction and microscopy with attosecond electron pulse trains

TL;DR: In this article, a beam of 70-keV electrons at 4.5-pm de Broglie wavelength is modulated by the electric field of laser cycles into a sequence of electron pulses with sub-optical-cycle duration.
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