Seminar by Prof. Margaret Murnane, JILA, University of Colorado, Boulder, USA
Event Date: 
Friday, 1 March 2019 - 5:15pm

Title: Harnessing Quantum Light Science for Tabletop X-Ray Lasers

Speaker: Prof. Margaret Murnane, JILA, University of Colorado, Boulder, USA

Abstract: Ever since the invention of the laser over 50 years ago, scientists have been striving to create an X-ray version of the laser. The X-ray sources we currently use in medicine, security screening, and science are in essence the same X-ray light bulb source that Röntgen used in 1895. In the same way that visible lasers can concentrate light energy far better than a light bulb, a directed beam of X-rays would have many useful applications in science and technology. The problem was that until recently, we needed enormously high power levels to make an x-ray laser. To make a practical, tabletop-scale, X-ray laser source required taking a very different approach that involves transforming a beam of light from a visible femtosecond laser into a beam of directed X-rays. The story behind how this happened is surprising and beautiful, highlighting how powerful our ability is to manipulate nature at a quantum level. Along the way, we also learned to generate the shortest strobe light in existence - fast enough to capture the fastest attosecond electron dynamics in materials. These new capabilities are already impacting nano and materials science, as well as showing promise for next-generation electronics, data and energy storage devices. Finally, by combining coherent high harmonic light sources with coherent diffractive imaging, it is now possible to achieve the first sub-wavelength imaging at short wavelengths.

Venue: 
Department Library, Physics Department
IIT Bombay, Powai, Mumbai