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Dive into the research topics where James P. Cryan is active.

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Featured researches published by James P. Cryan.


Science | 2014

Shapes and vorticities of superfluid helium nanodroplets

Luis F. Gomez; Ken R. Ferguson; James P. Cryan; Camila Bacellar; Rico Mayro P. Tanyag; Curtis Jones; Sebastian Schorb; Denis Anielski; A. Belkacem; Charles Bernando; Rebecca Boll; John D. Bozek; Sebastian Carron; Gang Chen; Tjark Delmas; Lars Englert; Sascha W. Epp; Benjamin Erk; Lutz Foucar; Robert Hartmann; Alexander Hexemer; Martin Huth; Justin Kwok; Stephen R. Leone; Jonathan H. S. Ma; Filipe R. N. C. Maia; Erik Malmerberg; Stefano Marchesini; Daniel M. Neumark; Billy K. Poon

X-raying superfluid helium droplets When physicists rotate the superfluid 4He, it develops a regular array of tiny whirlpools, called vortices. The same phenomenon should occur in helium droplets half a micrometer in size, but studying individual droplets is tricky. Gomez et al. used x-ray diffraction to deduce the shape of individual rotating droplets and image the resulting vortex patterns, which confirmed the superfluidity of the droplets. They found that superfluid droplets can host a surprising number of vortices and can rotate faster than normal droplets without disintegrating. Science, this issue p. 906 Vortex lattices inside individual helium droplets are imaged using x-ray diffraction. Helium nanodroplets are considered ideal model systems to explore quantum hydrodynamics in self-contained, isolated superfluids. However, exploring the dynamic properties of individual droplets is experimentally challenging. In this work, we used single-shot femtosecond x-ray coherent diffractive imaging to investigate the rotation of single, isolated superfluid helium-4 droplets containing ~108 to 1011 atoms. The formation of quantum vortex lattices inside the droplets is confirmed by observing characteristic Bragg patterns from xenon clusters trapped in the vortex cores. The vortex densities are up to five orders of magnitude larger than those observed in bulk liquid helium. The droplets exhibit large centrifugal deformations but retain axially symmetric shapes at angular velocities well beyond the stability range of viscous classical droplets.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2014

Spectral encoding method for measuring the relative arrival time between x-ray/optical pulses

Mina Bionta; Nick Hartmann; M. Weaver; Doug French; D. J. Nicholson; James P. Cryan; James M. Glownia; K. L. Baker; Christoph Bostedt; Matthieu Chollet; Y. Ding; David M. Fritz; Alan Fry; Daniel J. Kane; J. Krzywinski; Henrik T. Lemke; Marc Messerschmidt; Sebastian Schorb; Diling Zhu; William E. White; Ryan Coffee

The advent of few femtosecond x-ray light sources brings promise of x-ray/optical pump-probe experiments that can measure chemical and structural changes in the 10-100 fs time regime. Widely distributed timing systems used at x-ray Free-Electron Laser facilities are typically limited to above 50 fs fwhm jitter in active x-ray/optical synchronization. The approach of single-shot timing measurements is used to sort results in the event processing stage. This has seen wide use to accommodate the insufficient precision of active stabilization schemes. In this article, we review the current technique for measure-and-sort at the Linac Coherent Light Source at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory. The relative arrival time between an x-ray pulse and an optical pulse is measured near the experimental interaction region as a spectrally encoded cross-correlation signal. The cross-correlation provides a time-stamp for filter-and-sort algorithms used for real-time sorting. Sub-10 fs rms resolution is common in this technique, placing timing precision at the same scale as the duration of the shortest achievable x-ray pulses.


Structural Dynamics | 2015

Communication: X-ray coherent diffractive imaging by immersion in nanodroplets

Rico Mayro P. Tanyag; Charles Bernando; Curtis Jones; Camila Bacellar; Ken R. Ferguson; Denis Anielski; Rebecca Boll; Sebastian Carron; James P. Cryan; Lars Englert; Sascha W. Epp; Benjamin Erk; Lutz Foucar; Luis F. Gomez; Robert Hartmann; Daniel M. Neumark; Daniel Rolles; Benedikt Rudek; Artem Rudenko; Katrin R. Siefermann; Joachim Ullrich; Fabian Weise; Christoph Bostedt; Oliver Gessner; Andrey F. Vilesov

Lensless x-ray microscopy requires the recovery of the phase of the radiation scattered from a specimen. Here, we demonstrate a de novo phase retrieval technique by encapsulating an object in a superfluid helium nanodroplet, which provides both a physical support and an approximate scattering phase for the iterative image reconstruction. The technique is robust, fast-converging, and yields the complex density of the immersed object. Images of xenon clusters embedded in superfluid helium droplets reveal transient configurations of quantum vortices in this fragile system.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2014

Sub-nanosecond time-resolved ambient-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy setup for pulsed and constant wave X-ray light sources

Andrey Shavorskiy; Stefan Neppl; Daniel Slaughter; James P. Cryan; Katrin R. Siefermann; Fabian Weise; Ming-Fu Lin; Camila Bacellar; Michael P. Ziemkiewicz; Ioannis Zegkinoglou; Matthew Fraund; Champak Khurmi; Marcus P. Hertlein; Travis Wright; Nils Huse; Robert W. Schoenlein; Tolek Tyliszczak; G. Coslovich; Robert A. Kaindl; Bruce S. Rude; Andreas Ölsner; Sven Mähl; Hendrik Bluhm; Oliver Gessner

An apparatus for sub-nanosecond time-resolved ambient-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy studies with pulsed and constant wave X-ray light sources is presented. A differentially pumped hemispherical electron analyzer is equipped with a delay-line detector that simultaneously records the position and arrival time of every single electron at the exit aperture of the hemisphere with ~0.1 mm spatial resolution and ~150 ps temporal accuracy. The kinetic energies of the photoelectrons are encoded in the hit positions along the dispersive axis of the two-dimensional detector. Pump-probe time-delays are provided by the electron arrival times relative to the pump pulse timing. An average time-resolution of (780 ± 20) ps (FWHM) is demonstrated for a hemisphere pass energy E(p) = 150 eV and an electron kinetic energy range KE = 503-508 eV. The time-resolution of the setup is limited by the electron time-of-flight (TOF) spread related to the electron trajectory distribution within the analyzer hemisphere and within the electrostatic lens system that images the interaction volume onto the hemisphere entrance slit. The TOF spread for electrons with KE = 430 eV varies between ~9 ns at a pass energy of 50 eV and ~1 ns at pass energies between 200 eV and 400 eV. The correlation between the retarding ratio and the TOF spread is evaluated by means of both analytical descriptions of the electron trajectories within the analyzer hemisphere and computer simulations of the entire trajectories including the electrostatic lens system. In agreement with previous studies, we find that the by far dominant contribution to the TOF spread is acquired within the hemisphere. However, both experiment and computer simulations show that the lens system indirectly affects the time resolution of the setup to a significant extent by inducing a strong dependence of the angular spread of electron trajectories entering the hemisphere on the retarding ratio. The scaling of the angular spread with the retarding ratio can be well approximated by applying Liouvilles theorem of constant emittance to the electron trajectories inside the lens system. The performance of the setup is demonstrated by characterizing the laser fluence-dependent transient surface photovoltage response of a laser-excited Si(100) sample.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

Spectral encoding based measurement of x-ray/optical relative delay to ~10 fs rms

Mina Bionta; Doug French; James P. Cryan; J. M. Glownia; Nick Hartmann; David J. Nicholson; K. L. Baker; Christoph Bostedt; Marco Cammarrata; Matthieu Chollet; Y. Ding; David M. Fritz; Steve M. Durbin; Yiping Feng; M Harmand; Alan Fry; Daniel J. Kane; J. Krzywinski; Henrik T. Lemke; Marc Messerschmidt; Daniel Ratner; Sebastian Schorb; Sven Toleikis; Diling Zhu; William E. White; Ryan Coffee

A recently demonstrated single-shot measurement of the relative delay between x-ray FEL pulses and optical laser pulses has now been improved to ~10 fs rms error and has successfully been demonstrated for both soft and hard x-ray pulses. It is based on x-ray induced step-like reduction in optical transmissivity of a semiconductor membrane (Si3N4). The transmissivity is probed by an optical continuum spanning 450 - 650 nm where spectral chirp provides a mapping of the step in spectrum to the arrival time of the x-ray pulse relative to the optical laser system.


Optics Express | 2016

VUV and XUV reflectance of optically coated mirrors for selection of high harmonics

K. A. Larsen; James P. Cryan; N. Shivaram; Elio Champenois; Travis Wright; D. Ray; O. Kostko; Musa Ahmed; A. Belkacem; Daniel Slaughter

We report the reflectance, ~1° from normal incidence, of six different mirrors as a function of photon energy, using monochromatic vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) and extreme ultraviolet (XUV) radiation with energies between 7.5 eV and 24.5 eV. The mirrors examined included both single and multilayer optical coatings, as well as an uncoated substrate. We discuss the performance of each mirror, paying particular attention to the potential application of suppression and selection of high-order harmonics of a Ti:sapphire laser.


Physical Review B | 2016

Coupled motion of Xe clusters and quantum vortices in He nanodroplets

Curtis Jones; Charles Bernando; Rico Mayro P. Tanyag; Camila Bacellar; Ken R. Ferguson; Luis F. Gomez; Denis Anielski; A. Belkacem; Rebecca Boll; John D. Bozek; Sebastian Carron; James P. Cryan; Lars Englert; Sascha W. Epp; Benjamin Erk; Lutz Foucar; Robert Hartmann; Daniel M. Neumark; Daniel Rolles; A. Rudenko; Katrin R. Siefermann; Fabian Weise; Benedikt Rudek; Felix Sturm; Joachim H. Ullrich; Christoph Bostedt; Oliver Gessner; Andrey F. Vilesov


38th Int. Free Electron Laser Conf. (FEL'17), Santa Fe, NM, USA, August 20-25, 2017 | 2018

Characterizing Sub-Femtosecond X-ray Pulses from the Linac Coherent Light Source

Siqi Li; Ryan Coffee; James P. Cryan; Zhaoheng Guo; Kareem Hegazy; Zhirong Huang; Agostino Marinelli; Adi Natan; T. Osipov; D. Ray


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2012

X-ray--optical cross correlator for gas-phase experiments at the LCLS free-electron laser

Sebastian Schorb; Tais Gorkhover; James P. Cryan; J. M. Glownia; Mina Bionta; Ryan Coffee; Benjamin Erk; Rebecca Boll; Carlo Schmidt; Daniel Rolles; A. Rudenko; Arnaud Rouzée; M. Swiggers; S. Carron; Jean-Charles Castagna; John D. Bozek; M. Messerschmidt; W. F. Schlotter; Christoph Bostedt


Ultrafast Nonlinear Imaging and Spectroscopy VI | 2018

Imaging the ultrafast photoinduced ring opening of 1,3-cyclohexadiene with MeV ultrafast electron diffraction (Conference Presentation)

Thomas Wolf; Jie Yang; David M. Sanchez; João Pedro Figueira Nunes; Robert M. Parrish; Xiaozhe Shen; Martin Centurion; Ryan Coffee; James P. Cryan; Markus Gühr; Kareem Hegazy; Adam Kirrander; Renkai K. Li; Jennifer Ruddock; T. Vecchione; Stephen Weathersby; Peter M. Weber; Kyle J. Wilkin; Haiwang Yong; Quiang Zheng; Todd J. Martínez; Xijie Wang; Michael P. Minitti

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Christoph Bostedt

Argonne National Laboratory

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Camila Bacellar

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Oliver Gessner

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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A. Belkacem

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Curtis Jones

University of Southern California

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Ken R. Ferguson

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Luis F. Gomez

University of Southern California

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Rico Mayro P. Tanyag

University of Southern California

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Andrey F. Vilesov

University of Southern California

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Charles Bernando

University of Southern California

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