Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Aart J. Verhoef is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Aart J. Verhoef.


Nature | 2007

Attosecond real-time observation of electron tunnelling in atoms

Matthias Uiberacker; Thorsten Uphues; Martin Schultze; Aart J. Verhoef; Vladislav S. Yakovlev; Matthias F. Kling; Jens Rauschenberger; N M Kabachnik; H. Schröder; Matthias Lezius; K. L. Kompa; H. Müller; M. J. J. Vrakking; Stefan Hendel; Ulf Kleineberg; Ulrich Heinzmann; Markus Drescher; Ferenc Krausz

Atoms exposed to intense light lose one or more electrons and become ions. In strong fields, the process is predicted to occur via tunnelling through the binding potential that is suppressed by the light field near the peaks of its oscillations. Here we report the real-time observation of this most elementary step in strong-field interactions: light-induced electron tunnelling. The process is found to deplete atomic bound states in sharp steps lasting several hundred attoseconds. This suggests a new technique, attosecond tunnelling, for probing short-lived, transient states of atoms or molecules with high temporal resolution. The utility of attosecond tunnelling is demonstrated by capturing multi-electron excitation (shake-up) and relaxation (cascaded Auger decay) processes with subfemtosecond resolution.


Nature | 2005

Laser technology: source of coherent kiloelectronvolt X-rays.

J. Seres; E. Seres; Aart J. Verhoef; Gabriel Tempea; Ch. Streli; P. Wobrauschek; Vladislav S. Yakovlev; Armin Scrinzi; Ch. Spielmann; Ferenc Krausz

Generating X-rays that have the properties of laser light has been a long-standing goal for experimental science. Here we describe the emission of highly collimated, spatially coherent X-rays, at a wavelength of about 1 nanometre and at photon energies extending to 1.3 kiloelectronvolts, from atoms that have been ionized by a 5-femtosecond laser pulse. This means that a laboratory source of laser-like, kiloelectronvolt X-rays, which will operate on timescales relevant to many chemical, biological and materials problems, is now within reach.


Optics Letters | 2009

Self-compression of millijoule 1.5 μm pulses

Oliver D. Mücke; S. Ališauskas; Aart J. Verhoef; A. Pugžlys; Andrius Baltuska; V. Smilgevicius; Jonas Pocius; Linas Giniūnas; R. Danielius; Nicolas Forget

We demonstrate a four-stage optical parametric chirped-pulse amplification system that delivers carrier-envelope phase-stable approximately 1.5 microm pulses with energies up to 12.5 mJ before recompression. The system is based on a fusion of femtosecond diode-pumped solid-state Yb technology and a picosecond 100 mJ Nd:YAG pump laser. Pulses with 62 nm bandwidth are recompressed to a 74.4 fs duration close to the transform limit. To show the way toward a terawatt-peak-power single-cycle IR source, we demonstrate self-compression of 2.2 mJ pulses down to 19.8 fs duration in a single filament in argon with a 1.5 mJ output energy and 66% energy throughput.


Optics Letters | 2008

Ultrabroadband, coherent light source based on self-channeling of few-cycle pulses in helium

Eleftherios Goulielmakis; S. Koehler; B. Reiter; Martin Schultze; Aart J. Verhoef; E. E. Serebryannikov; Aleksei M. Zheltikov; Ferenc Krausz

Self-channeling of few-cycle laser pulses in helium at high pressure generates coherent light supercontinua spanning the range of 270-1000 nm, with the highest efficiency demonstrated to date. Our results open the door to the synthesis of powerful light waveforms shaped within the carrier field oscillation cycle and hold promise for the generation of pulses at the single-cycle limit.


New Journal of Physics | 2008

Imaging of carrier-envelope phase effects in above-threshold ionization with intense few-cycle laser fields

Matthias F. Kling; Jens Rauschenberger; Aart J. Verhoef; E Hasović; Thorsten Uphues; D. B. Milošević; H. Müller; M. J. J. Vrakking

Sub-femtosecond control of the electron emission in above-threshold ionization of the rare gases Ar, Xe and Kr in intense few-cycle laser fields is reported with full angular resolution. Experimental data that were obtained with the velocity-map imaging technique are compared to simulations using the strong-field approximation (SFA) and full time-dependent Schrodinger equation (TDSE) calculations. We find a pronounced asymmetry in both the energy and angular distributions of the electron emission that critically depends on the carrier-envelope phase (CEP) of the laser field. The potential use of imaging techniques as a tool for single-shot detection of the CEP is discussed.


Nature Methods | 2016

Fast volumetric calcium imaging across multiple cortical layers using sculpted light

Robert Prevedel; Aart J. Verhoef; Alejandro J Pernía-Andrade; Siegfried Weisenburger; Ben S Huang; Tobias Nöbauer; Alma Fernandez; Jeroen E Delcour; Peyman Golshani; Andrius Baltuska; Alipasha Vaziri

Although whole-organism calcium imaging in small and semi-transparent animals has been demonstrated, capturing the functional dynamics of large-scale neuronal circuits in awake behaving mammals at high speed and resolution has remained one of the main frontiers in systems neuroscience. Here we present a method based on light sculpting that enables unbiased single- and dual-plane high-speed (up to 160 Hz) calcium imaging as well as in vivo volumetric calcium imaging of a mouse cortical column (0.5 mm × 0.5 mm × 0.5 mm) at single-cell resolution and fast volume rates (3–6 Hz). We achieved this by tailoring the point-spread function of our microscope to the structures of interest while maximizing the signal-to-noise ratio using a home-built fiber laser amplifier with pulses that are synchronized to the imaging voxel speed. This enabled in vivo recording of calcium dynamics of several thousand neurons across cortical layers and in the hippocampus of awake behaving mice.


Molecular Physics | 2008

Strong-field control of electron localisation during molecular dissociation

Matthias F. Kling; Christian Siedschlag; Irina Znakovskaya; Aart J. Verhoef; Sergey Zherebtsov; Ferenc Krausz; Matthias Lezius; M. J. J. Vrakking

We demonstrate how the waveform of light can be used to control a molecular dissociation by the steering and localisation of electrons. Experimental results have been obtained for the dissociative ionisation of the homonuclear and heteronuclear hydrogen derivates D2 and HD. Asymmetric ejection of the ionic fragments reveals that light-driven electronic motion prior to dissociation localises the electron on one of the two ions in diatomic molecular ions in a controlled way. Extension of these results to electron transfer in complex molecules suggests a new paradigm for controlling photochemistry.


Optics Letters | 2006

Few-cycle carrier envelope phase-dependent stereo detection of electrons

Aart J. Verhoef; Alma Fernandez; Matthias Lezius; Kevin O'Keeffe; Matthias Uiberacker; Ferenc Krausz

The spatial distribution of electrons emitted from atoms by few-cycle optical fields is known to be dependent on the carrier envelope phase, i.e., the phase of the field with respect to the pulse envelope. With respect to Paulus et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett.91, 253004 (2003)] we propose a greatly simplified device to measure and control the carrier envelope phase of few-cycle pulses with an accuracy of better than pi/10 based on this principle. We compared different schemes to control the carrier envelope phase of our pulses.


New Journal of Physics | 2011

Time-and-energy-resolved measurement of Auger cascades following Kr 3d excitation by attosecond pulses

Aart J. Verhoef; Alexander Mitrofanov; X. T. Nguyen; Maria Krikunova; S. Fritzsche; N M Kabachnik; Markus Drescher; Andrius Baltuska

We show that attosecond metrology has evolved from proof-of- principle experiments to a level where complex processes can be resolved in time that cannot be accessed using any other existing technique. The cascaded Auger decay following ionization and excitation of the 3d-subshell in Kr with subfemtosecond 94eV soft x-ray pulses has been energy- and time-resolved in an x-ray pump-infrared probe experiment. This Auger cascade reveals rich multi- electron dynamics, which despite the fact that there are many experimental and theoretical data available, is not yet fully understood. We present time-resolved data showing the sequence of the temporal dynamics in the cascaded Auger


Optics Letters | 2009

Broadly tunable carrier envelope phase stable optical parametric amplifier pumped by a monolithic ytterbium fiber amplifier

Alma Fernandez; Lingxiao Zhu; Aart J. Verhoef; D. A. Sidorov-Biryukov; A. Pugžlys; Andrius Baltuska; Kai-Hsiu Liao; Ch.-H. Liu; Almantas Galvanauskas; Steve Kane; Ronald Holzwarth; F. Ö. Ilday

In an effort to develop a robust and efficient front end for a chirped-pulse parametric amplification chain, we demonstrate a broadband difference-frequency converter driven by a monolithic femtosecond Yb-doped-fiber amplifier and emitting carrier-envelope-offset-free pulses with the energy of tens of nanojoules tunable in the wavelength range from 1200 nm to beyond 2 mum. Next to providing these seed pulses, the system enables direct optical synchronization of Nd- and Yb-doped pump lasers for subsequent parametric amplification.

Collaboration


Dive into the Aart J. Verhoef's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrius Baltuska

Vienna University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alma Fernandez

Vienna University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alexander Mitrofanov

Vienna University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lingxiao Zhu

Vienna University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Audrius Pugzlys

Vienna University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Oliver D. Mücke

Vienna University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Maria Krikunova

Technical University of Berlin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge