Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Hubertus Bromberger is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Hubertus Bromberger.


Physical Review B | 2011

Driving magnetic order in a manganite by ultrafast lattice excitation

Michael Först; R.I. Tobey; Simon Wall; Hubertus Bromberger; Vikaran Khanna; Adrian L. Cavalieri; Yi-De Chuang; Wei-Sheng Lee; R. G. Moore; W. F. Schlotter; J. J. Turner; O. Krupin; M. Trigo; H. Zheng; J. F. Mitchell; S. S. Dhesi; J. P. Hill; Andrea Cavalleri

Femtosecond midinfrared pulses are used to directly excite the lattice of the single-layer manganite La0.5Sr1.5MnO4. Magnetic and orbital orders, as measured by femtosecond resonant soft x-ray diffraction with an x-ray free-electron laser, are reduced within a few picoseconds. This effect is interpreted as a displacive exchange quench, a prompt shift in the equilibrium value of the magnetic- and orbital-order parameters after the lattice has been distorted. Control of magnetism through ultrafast lattice excitation may be of use for high-speed optomagnetism.


Nature Communications | 2015

Femtosecond all-optical synchronization of an X-ray free-electron laser

Steven Schulz; Ivanka Grguraš; C. Behrens; Hubertus Bromberger; John T. Costello; Marie Kristin Czwalinna; Margret Felber; Matthias C. Hoffmann; M. Ilchen; Haiyun Liu; T. Mazza; Michael Meyer; Sammy Pfeiffer; Pawel Predki; Sigrid Schefer; Carlo Schmidt; Ursula Wegner; Holger Schlarb; Adrian L. Cavalieri

Many advanced applications of X-ray free-electron lasers require pulse durations and time resolutions of only a few femtoseconds. To generate these pulses and to apply them in time-resolved experiments, synchronization techniques that can simultaneously lock all independent components, including all accelerator modules and all external optical lasers, to better than the delivered free-electron laser pulse duration, are needed. Here we achieve all-optical synchronization at the soft X-ray free-electron laser FLASH and demonstrate facility-wide timing to better than 30 fs r.m.s. for 90 fs X-ray photon pulses. Crucially, our analysis indicates that the performance of this optical synchronization is limited primarily by the free-electron laser pulse duration, and should naturally scale to the sub-10 femtosecond level with shorter X-ray pulses.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Ultrafast Strain Engineering in Complex Oxide Heterostructures

A. D. Caviglia; Raoul Scherwitzl; Paul Popovich; Wanzheng Hu; Hubertus Bromberger; Rashmi Singla; Matteo Mitrano; Matthias C. Hoffmann; S. Kaiser; Pavlo Zubko; Stefano Gariglio; Jean-Marc Triscone; Michael Först; Andrea Cavalleri

We report on ultrafast optical experiments in which femtosecond midinfrared radiation is used to excite the lattice of complex oxide heterostructures. By tuning the excitation energy to a vibrational mode of the substrate, a long-lived five-order-of-magnitude increase of the electrical conductivity of NdNiO(3) epitaxial thin films is observed as a structural distortion propagates across the interface. Vibrational excitation, extended here to a wide class of heterostructures and interfaces, may be conducive to new strategies for electronic phase control at THz repetition rates.


Nature Materials | 2015

Spatially resolved ultrafast magnetic dynamics initiated at a complex oxide heterointerface

Michael Först; A. D. Caviglia; Raoul Scherwitzl; Roman Mankowsky; Pavlo Zubko; Vikaran Khanna; Hubertus Bromberger; S. B. Wilkins; Y.-D. Chuang; W. S. Lee; W. F. Schlotter; J. J. Turner; Georgi L. Dakovski; Michael P. Minitti; Stephen Clark; Dieter Jaksch; Jean-Marc Triscone; J. P. Hill; S. S. Dhesi; Andrea Cavalleri

Static strain in complex oxide heterostructures has been extensively used to engineer electronic and magnetic properties at equilibrium. In the same spirit, deformations of the crystal lattice with light may be used to achieve functional control across heterointerfaces dynamically. Here, by exciting large-amplitude infrared-active vibrations in a LaAlO3 substrate we induce magnetic order melting in a NdNiO3 film across a heterointerface. Femtosecond resonant soft X-ray diffraction is used to determine the spatiotemporal evolution of the magnetic disordering. We observe a magnetic melt front that propagates from the substrate interface into the film, at a speed that suggests electronically driven motion. Light control and ultrafast phase front propagation at heterointerfaces may lead to new opportunities in optomagnetism, for example by driving domain wall motion to transport information across suitably designed devices.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Melting of Charge Stripes in Vibrationally Driven La1.875Ba0.125CuO4 : Assessing the Respective Roles of Electronic and Lattice Order in Frustrated Superconductors

Michael Först; R. I. Tobey; Hubertus Bromberger; S. B. Wilkins; Vikaran Khanna; A. D. Caviglia; Yi-De Chuang; W. S. Lee; W. F. Schlotter; J. J. Turner; Michael P. Minitti; O. Krupin; Z. J. Xu; J. S. Wen; G. D. Gu; S. S. Dhesi; Andrea Cavalleri; J. P. Hill

We report femtosecond resonant soft x-ray diffraction measurements of the dynamics of the charge order and of the crystal lattice in nonsuperconducting, stripe-ordered La1.875Ba0.125CuO4. Excitation of the in-plane Cu-O stretching phonon with a midinfrared pulse has been previously shown to induce a transient superconducting state in the closely related compound La1.675Eu0.2Sr0.125CuO4. In La1.875Ba0.125CuO4, we find that the charge stripe order melts promptly on a subpicosecond time scale. Surprisingly, the low temperature tetragonal (LTT) distortion is only weakly reduced, reacting on significantly longer time scales that do not correlate with light-induced superconductivity. This experiment suggests that charge modulations alone, and not the LTT distortion, prevent superconductivity in equilibrium.


Optics Express | 2012

Efficient continuous wave and passively mode-locked Tm-doped crystalline silicate laser

Kejian Yang; Hubertus Bromberger; Dirk C. Heinecke; Christoph Kölbl; Hanjo Schäfer; Thomas Dekorsy; Shengzhi Zhao; Lihe Zheng; Jun Xu; Guangjun Zhao

An efficient continuous wave and passively mode-locked thulium-doped oxyorthosilicate Tm:LuYSiO5 laser is demonstrated. A maximum slope efficiency of 56.3% is obtained at 2057.4 nm in continuous wave operation regime. With an InGaAs quantum well SESAM, self-starting passively mode-locked Tm:LuYSiO5 laser is realized in the 1929 nm to 2065 nm spectral region. A maximum average output power of 130.2 mW with a pulse duration of 33.1 ps and a repetition rate of about 100 MHz is generated at 1984.1 nm. Pulses as short as 24.2 ps with an average output power of 100 mW are obtained with silicon prisms where used to manage the intracavity dispersion. The shortest pulse duration of about 19.6 ps is obtained with an average output power of 64.5 mW at 1944.3 nm.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Phonon-Pump Extreme-Ultraviolet-Photoemission Probe in Graphene: Anomalous Heating of Dirac Carriers by Lattice Deformation

Isabella Gierz; Matteo Mitrano; Hubertus Bromberger; Cephise Cacho; Richard T. Chapman; E. Springate; Stefan Link; U. Starke; Burkhard Sachs; Martin Eckstein; T. O. Wehling; M. I. Katsnelson; A. I. Lichtenstein; Andrea Cavalleri

We modulate the atomic structure of bilayer graphene by driving its lattice at resonance with the in-plane E1u lattice vibration at 6.3μm. Using timeand angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (tr-ARPES) with extreme ultra-violet (XUV) pulses, we measure the response of the Dirac electrons near the K-point. We observe that lattice modulation causes anomalous carrier dynamics, with the Dirac electrons reaching lower peak temperatures and relaxing at faster rate compared to when the excitation is applied away from the phonon resonance or in monolayer samples. Frozen phonon calculations predict dramatic band structure changes when the E1u vibration is driven, which we use to explain the anomalous dynamics observed in the experiment. 1 ar X iv :1 41 1. 38 88 v1 [ co nd -m at .m es -h al l] 1 4 N ov 2 01 4


Physical Review B | 2016

Restoring interlayer Josephson coupling in La1.885Ba0.115CuO4 by charge transfer melting of stripe order

Vikaran Khanna; Roman Mankowsky; Michaela Petrich; Hubertus Bromberger; S. A. Cavill; E. Möhr-Vorobeva; D. Nicoletti; Yannis Laplace; G. D. Gu; J. P. Hill; Michael Först; Andrea Cavalleri; S. S. Dhesi

Here, we show that disruption of charge-density-wave (stripe) order by charge transfer excitation, enhances the superconducting phase rigidity in La1.885Ba0.115CuO4. Time-resolved resonant soft x-ray diffraction demonstrates that charge order melting is prompt following near-infrared photoexcitation whereas the crystal structure remains intact for moderate fluences. THz time-domain spectroscopy reveals that, for the first 2 ps following photoexcitation, a new Josephson plasma resonance edge, at higher frequency with respect to the equilibrium edge, is induced indicating enhanced superconducting interlayer coupling. Furthermore, the fluence dependence of the charge-order melting and the enhanced superconducting interlayer coupling are correlated with a saturation limit of ~0.5mJ/cm2. When using a combination of x-ray and optical spectroscopies we establish a hierarchy of timescales between enhanced superconductivity, melting of charge order, and rearrangement of the crystal structure.


Applied Physics Letters | 2015

Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy with 9-eV photon-energy pulses generated in a gas-filled hollow-core photonic crystal fiber

Hubertus Bromberger; Alexey Ermolov; Federico Belli; Haiyun Liu; F. Calegari; M. Chávez-Cervantes; Mengyuan Li; C.T. Lin; A. Abdolvand; P. St. J. Russell; Andrea Cavalleri; J. C. Travers; Isabella Gierz

A recently developed source of ultraviolet radiation, based on optical soliton propagation in a gas-filled hollow-core photonic crystal fiber, is applied here to angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES). Near-infrared femtosecond pulses of only few μJ energy generate vacuum ultraviolet radiation between 5.5 and 9 eV inside the gas-filled fiber. These pulses are used to measure the band structure of the topological insulator Bi2Se3 with a signal to noise ratio comparable to that obtained with high order harmonics from a gas jet. The two-order-of-magnitude gain in efficiency promises time-resolved ARPES measurements at repetition rates of hundreds of kHz or even MHz, with photon energies that cover the first Brillouin zone of most materials.


Physical Review B | 2017

Ultrafast momentum imaging of pseudospin-flip excitations in graphene

Sven Aeschlimann; R. Krause; M. Chávez-Cervantes; Hubertus Bromberger; Roland Jago; Ermin Malic; A. Al-Temimy; Camilla Coletti; Andrea Cavalleri; Isabella Gierz

The pseudospin of Dirac electrons in graphene manifests itself in a peculiar momentum anisotropy for photoexcited electron-hole pairs. These interband excitations are in fact forbidden along the direction of the light polarization and are maximum perpendicular to it. Here, we use time-and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy to investigate the resulting unconventional hot carrier dynamics, sampling carrier distributions as a function of energy, and in-plane momentum. We first show that the rapidly-established quasithermal electron distribution initially exhibits an azimuth-dependent temperature, consistent with relaxation through collinear electron-electron scattering. Azimuthal thermalization is found to occur only at longer time delays, at a rate that depends on the substrate and the static doping level. Further, we observe pronounced differences in the electron and hole dynamics in n-doped samples. By simulating the Coulomb-and phonon-mediated carrier dynamics we are able to disentangle the influence of excitation fluence, screening, and doping, and develop a microscopic picture of the carrier dynamics in photoexcited graphene. Our results clarify new aspects of hot carrier dynamics that are unique to Dirac materials, with relevance for photocontrol experiments and optoelectronic device applications.

Collaboration


Dive into the Hubertus Bromberger's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. P. Hill

Brookhaven National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. J. Turner

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

W. F. Schlotter

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

S. B. Wilkins

Brookhaven National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yi-De Chuang

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge