Department of Physics and Astronomy: Publications and Other Research

 

Date of this Version

6-2-2000

Comments

Published by American Physical Society. Copyright 2000. Physical Review Focus 5, story 25, 2 June 2000. Permission to use. http://focus.aps.org/v5/st25.html.

Abstract

Lasers come in infrared and visible varieties, but none yet in the x-ray band. A compact and powerful source of coherent x rays is the dream of many physicists, who see applications such as making atomic scale, three-dimensional movies of a melting crystal or an operating photosynthesis protein. In a step toward that goal, a research team has detected high frequency coherent light generated by a new process. As they report in the 12 June PRL, intense laser pulses can stimulate free electrons in a plasma to emit coherent light at triple the input frequency in a narrowly-directed cone. The authors say that much higher frequencies should be possible in the future, but their other goal is to learn more about the poorly understood interactions between light and electrons under these extreme conditions.

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