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Dive into the research topics where Christian Peltz is active.

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Featured researches published by Christian Peltz.


Nature Communications | 2015

The 3D-architecture of individual free silver nanoparticles captured by X-ray scattering

Ingo Barke; Hannes Hartmann; Daniela Rupp; Leonie Flückiger; Mario Sauppe; Marcus Adolph; Sebastian Schorb; Christoph Bostedt; Rolf Treusch; Christian Peltz; Stephan Bartling; Thomas Fennel; Karl-Heinz Meiwes-Broer; T. Möller

The diversity of nanoparticle shapes generated by condensation from gaseous matter reflects the fundamental competition between thermodynamic equilibration and the persistence of metastable configurations during growth. In the kinetically limited regime, intermediate geometries that are favoured only in early formation stages can be imprinted in the finally observed ensemble of differently structured specimens. Here we demonstrate that single-shot wide-angle scattering of femtosecond soft X-ray free-electron laser pulses allows three-dimensional characterization of the resulting metastable nanoparticle structures. For individual free silver particles, which can be considered frozen in space for the duration of photon exposure, both shape and orientation are uncovered from measured scattering images. We identify regular shapes, including species with fivefold symmetry and surprisingly large aspect ratio up to particle radii of the order of 100 nm. Our approach includes scattering effects beyond Born’s approximation and is remarkably efficient—opening up new routes in ultrafast nanophysics and free-electron laser science.


Nature Communications | 2015

Field propagation-induced directionality of carrier-envelope phase-controlled photoemission from nanospheres

Frederik Süßmann; Lennart Seiffert; Sergey Zherebtsov; V. Mondes; J. Stierle; Mathias Arbeiter; J. Plenge; Philipp Rupp; Christian Peltz; Alexander Kessel; Sergei A. Trushin; Byung-Tae Ahn; Dong Eon Kim; Christina Graf; E. Rühl; Matthias F. Kling; Thomas Fennel

Near-fields of non-resonantly laser-excited nanostructures enable strong localization of ultrashort light fields and have opened novel routes to fundamentally modify and control electronic strong-field processes. Harnessing spatiotemporally tunable near-fields for the steering of sub-cycle electron dynamics may enable ultrafast optoelectronic devices and unprecedented control in the generation of attosecond electron and photon pulses. Here we utilize unsupported sub-wavelength dielectric nanospheres to generate near-fields with adjustable structure and study the resulting strong-field dynamics via photoelectron imaging. We demonstrate field propagation-induced tunability of the emission direction of fast recollision electrons up to a regime, where nonlinear charge interaction effects become dominant in the acceleration process. Our analysis supports that the timing of the recollision process remains controllable with attosecond resolution by the carrier-envelope phase, indicating the possibility to expand near-field-mediated control far into the realm of high-field phenomena.


New Journal of Physics | 2012

Carrier–envelope phase-tagged imaging of the controlled electron acceleration from SiO2 nanospheres in intense few-cycle laser fields

Sergey Zherebtsov; Frederik Süßmann; Christian Peltz; J. Plenge; K.J. Betsch; Irina Znakovskaya; Ali Sami Alnaser; Nora G. Johnson; Matthias Kübel; Anton Horn; V. Mondes; Christina Graf; Sergei A. Trushin; Abdallah M. Azzeer; Marc J. J. Vrakking; G. G. Paulus; Ferenc Krausz; E. Rühl; Thomas Fennel; Matthias F. Kling

Waveform-controlled light fields offer the possibility of manipu- lating ultrafast electronic processes on sub-cycle timescales. The optical light- wave control of the collective electron motion in nanostructured materials is key to the design of electronic devices operating at up to petahertz frequencies. We have studied the directional control of the electron emission from 95nm 10 Authors to whom any correspondence should be addressed.


New Journal of Physics | 2012

Fully microscopic analysis of laser-driven finite plasmas using the example of clusters

Christian Peltz; Charles Varin; Thomas Brabec; Thomas Fennel

We discuss a microscopic particle-in-cell (MicPIC) approach that allows bridging of the microscopic and macroscopic realms of laser-driven plasma physics. The simultaneous resolution of collisions and electromagnetic field propagation in MicPIC enables the investigation of processes that have been inaccessible to rigorous numerical scrutiny so far. This is illustrated by the two main findings of our analysis of pre-ionized, resonantly laser-driven clusters, which can be realized experimentally in pump–probe experiments. In the linear response regime, MicPIC data are used to extract the individual microscopic contributions to the dielectric cluster response function, such as surface and bulk collision frequencies. We demonstrate that the competition between surface collisions and radiation damping is responsible for the maximum in the size-dependent lifetime of the Mie surface plasmon. The capacity to determine the microscopic underpinning of optical material parameters opens new avenues for modeling nano-plasmonics and nano-photonics systems. In the non-perturbative regime, we analyze the formation and evolution of recollision-induced plasma waves in laser-driven clusters. The resulting dynamics of the electron density and local field hot spots opens a new research direction for the field of attosecond science.


Nature Communications | 2017

Coherent diffractive imaging of single helium nanodroplets with a high harmonic generation source

Daniela Rupp; Nils Monserud; Bruno Langbehn; Mario Sauppe; Julian Zimmermann; Y. Ovcharenko; T. Möller; Fabio Frassetto; Luca Poletto; Andrea Trabattoni; Francesca Calegari; M. Nisoli; Katharina Sander; Christian Peltz; Marc J. J. Vrakking; Thomas Fennel; Arnaud Rouzée

Coherent diffractive imaging of individual free nanoparticles has opened routes for the in situ analysis of their transient structural, optical, and electronic properties. So far, single-shot single-particle diffraction was assumed to be feasible only at extreme ultraviolet and X-ray free-electron lasers, restricting this research field to large-scale facilities. Here we demonstrate single-shot imaging of isolated helium nanodroplets using extreme ultraviolet pulses from a femtosecond-laser-driven high harmonic source. We obtain bright wide-angle scattering patterns, that allow us to uniquely identify hitherto unresolved prolate shapes of superfluid helium droplets. Our results mark the advent of single-shot gas-phase nanoscopy with lab-based short-wavelength pulses and pave the way to ultrafast coherent diffractive imaging with phase-controlled multicolor fields and attosecond pulses.Diffraction imaging studies of free individual nanoparticles have so far been restricted to XUV and X-ray free - electron laser facilities. Here the authors demonstrate the possibility of using table-top XUV laser sources to image prolate shapes of superfluid helium droplets.


Nature Communications | 2017

Nanoplasmonic electron acceleration by attosecond-controlled forward rescattering in silver clusters

Johannes Passig; Sergey Zherebtsov; Robert Irsig; Mathias Arbeiter; Christian Peltz; S. Göde; Slawomir Skruszewicz; Karl-Heinz Meiwes-Broer; J. Tiggesbäumker; Matthias F. Kling; Thomas Fennel

In the strong-field photoemission from atoms, molecules, and surfaces, the fastest electrons emerge from tunneling and subsequent field-driven recollision, followed by elastic backscattering. This rescattering picture is central to attosecond science and enables control of the electron’s trajectory via the sub-cycle evolution of the laser electric field. Here we reveal a so far unexplored route for waveform-controlled electron acceleration emerging from forward rescattering in resonant plasmonic systems. We studied plasmon-enhanced photoemission from silver clusters and found that the directional acceleration can be controlled up to high kinetic energy with the relative phase of a two-color laser field. Our analysis reveals that the cluster’s plasmonic near-field establishes a sub-cycle directional gate that enables the selective acceleration. The identified generic mechanism offers robust attosecond control of the electron acceleration at plasmonic nanostructures, opening perspectives for laser-based sources of attosecond electron pulses.Accelerating electrons to high energy and controlling their properties on ultrafast timescales is challenging. Here the authors show controlled acceleration of electron bunches using forward scattering in the resonantly enhanced polarization field of silver clusters driven by a phase-tuned two-color laser field.


Journal of Physics B | 2015

Influence of wavelength and pulse duration on single-shot x-ray diffraction patterns from nonspherical nanoparticles

Katharina Sander; Christian Peltz; Charles Varin; Stefan Scheel; Thomas Brabec; Thomas Fennel

We introduce a complex scaling discrete dipole approximation (CSDDA) method and study single-shot x-ray diffraction patterns from non-spherical, absorbing nanotargets in the limit of linear response. The convergence of the employed Born series-based iterative solution of the discrete dipole approximation problem via optimal complex mixing turns out to be substantially faster than the original approach with real-valued mixing coefficients, without additional numerical effort per iteration. The CSDDA method is employed to calculate soft x-ray diffraction patterns from large icosahedral silver nanoparticles with diameters up to about . Our analysis confirms the requirement of relatively long wavelengths to map truly 3D structure information to the experimentally accessible regions of 2D scattering images. On the other hand, we show that short wavelengths are preferable to retain visibility of fine structures such as interference fringes in the scattering patterns when using ultrashort x-ray pulses in the attosecond domain. A simple model is presented to estimate the minimal pulse duration below which the fringe contrast vanishes. Knowledge of the impact of the bandwidth of short pulses on the diffraction images is important to extract information on ultrafast dynamical processes from time-resolved x-ray diffractive imaging experiments on free nanoparticles, in particular at long wavelengths.


Nature Communications | 2018

Publisher Correction: Coherent diffractive imaging of single helium nanodroplets with a high harmonic generation source

Daniela Rupp; Nils Monserud; Bruno Langbehn; Mario Sauppe; Julian Zimmermann; Y. Ovcharenko; T. Möller; Fabio Frassetto; Luca Poletto; Andrea Trabattoni; Francesca Calegari; M. Nisoli; Katharina Sander; Christian Peltz; Marc J. J. Vrakking; Thomas Fennel; Arnaud Rouzée

In the original version of this Article, the affiliation for Luca Poletto was incorrectly given as ‘European XFEL GmbH, Holzkoppel 4, 22869 Schenefeld, Hamburg, Germany’, instead of the correct ‘CNR, Istituto di Fotonica e Nanotecnologie Padova, Via Trasea 7, 35131 Padova, Italy’. This has now been corrected in both the PDF and HTML versions of the Article.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

Measurement of high-dynamic range x-ray Thomson scattering spectra for the characterization of nano-plasmas at LCLS

Michael MacDonald; Tais Gorkhover; B. Bachmann; Maximilian Bucher; S. Carron; Ryan Coffee; R. P. Drake; Ken R. Ferguson; L. B. Fletcher; E. J. Gamboa; S. H. Glenzer; S. Göde; Stefan P. Hau-Riege; D. Kraus; J. Krzywinski; A. L. Levitan; K. H. Meiwes-Broer; C. P. O’Grady; T. Osipov; T. Pardini; Christian Peltz; Slawomir Skruszewicz; M. Swiggers; Christoph Bostedt; Thomas Fennel; T. Döppner

Atomic clusters can serve as ideal model systems for exploring ultrafast (∼100 fs) laser-driven ionization dynamics of dense matter on the nanometer scale. Resonant absorption of optical laser pulses enables heating to temperatures on the order of 1 keV at near solid density conditions. To date, direct probing of transient states of such nano-plasmas was limited to coherent x-ray imaging. Here we present the first measurement of spectrally resolved incoherent x-ray scattering from clusters, enabling measurements of transient temperature, densities, and ionization. Single shot x-ray Thomson scattering signals were recorded at 120 Hz using a crystal spectrometer in combination with a single-photon counting and energy-dispersive pnCCD. A precise pump laser collimation scheme enabled recording near background-free scattering spectra from Ar clusters with an unprecedented dynamic range of more than 3 orders of magnitude. Such measurements are important for understanding collective effects in laser-matter interactions on femtosecond time scales, opening new routes for the development of schemes for their ultrafast control.


Journal of Instrumentation | 2016

Dual crystal x-ray spectrometer at 1.8 keV for high repetition-rate single-photon counting spectroscopy experiments

E. J. Gamboa; B. Bachmann; D. Kraus; M. J. MacDonald; Maximilian Bucher; S. Carron; Ryan Coffee; R. P. Drake; J.A. Emig; Ken R. Ferguson; L. B. Fletcher; S. H. Glenzer; Tais Gorkhover; Stefan P. Hau-Riege; J. Krzywinski; A. L. Levitan; K. H. Meiwes-Broer; T. Osipov; T. Pardini; Christian Peltz; Slawomir Skruszewicz; Christoph Bostedt; Thomas Fennel; T. Döppner

With the recent development of high-repetition rate x-ray free electron lasers (FEL), it is now possible to perform x-ray scattering and emission spectroscopy measurements from thin foils or gasses heated to high-energy density conditions by integrating over many experimental shots. Since the expected signal may be weaker than the typical CCD readout noise over the region-of-interest, it is critical to the success of this approach to use a detector with high-energy resolution so that single x-ray photons may be isolated. Here we describe a dual channel x-ray spectrometer developed for the Atomic and Molecular Optics endstation at the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) for x-ray spectroscopy near the K-edge of aluminum. The spectrometer is based on a pair of curved PET (002) crystals coupled to a single pnCCD detector which simultaneously measures x-ray scattering and emission in the forward and backward directions. The signals from single x-ray photons are accumulated permitting continuous single-shot acquisition at 120 Hz.

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Daniela Rupp

Technical University of Berlin

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E. Rühl

Free University of Berlin

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T. Möller

Technical University of Berlin

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