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Dive into the research topics where Jonathan P. Marangos is active.

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Featured researches published by Jonathan P. Marangos.


Reports on Progress in Physics | 2017

Attosecond physics at the nanoscale

Marcello F. Ciappina; J. A. Pérez-Hernández; Alexandra S. Landsman; William Okell; Sergey Zherebtsov; Benjamin Förg; Johannes Schötz; J. L. Seiffert; Thomas Fennel; T. Shaaran; T. Zimmermann; A. Chacón; R. Guichard; A. Zaïr; J. W. G. Tisch; Jonathan P. Marangos; Tobias Witting; Avi Braun; Stefan A. Maier; L. Roso; Michael Krüger; Peter Hommelhoff; Matthias F. Kling; Ferenc Krausz; Maciej Lewenstein

Recently two emerging areas of research, attosecond and nanoscale physics, have started to come together. Attosecond physics deals with phenomena occurring when ultrashort laser pulses, with duration on the femto- and sub-femtosecond time scales, interact with atoms, molecules or solids. The laser-induced electron dynamics occurs natively on a timescale down to a few hundred or even tens of attoseconds (1 attosecond  =  1 as  =  10-18 s), which is comparable with the optical field. For comparison, the revolution of an electron on a 1s orbital of a hydrogen atom is  ∼152 as. On the other hand, the second branch involves the manipulation and engineering of mesoscopic systems, such as solids, metals and dielectrics, with nanometric precision. Although nano-engineering is a vast and well-established research field on its own, the merger with intense laser physics is relatively recent. In this report on progress we present a comprehensive experimental and theoretical overview of physics that takes place when short and intense laser pulses interact with nanosystems, such as metallic and dielectric nanostructures. In particular we elucidate how the spatially inhomogeneous laser induced fields at a nanometer scale modify the laser-driven electron dynamics. Consequently, this has important impact on pivotal processes such as above-threshold ionization and high-order harmonic generation. The deep understanding of the coupled dynamics between these spatially inhomogeneous fields and matter configures a promising way to new avenues of research and applications. Thanks to the maturity that attosecond physics has reached, together with the tremendous advance in material engineering and manipulation techniques, the age of atto-nanophysics has begun, but it is in the initial stage. We present thus some of the open questions, challenges and prospects for experimental confirmation of theoretical predictions, as well as experiments aimed at characterizing the induced fields and the unique electron dynamics initiated by them with high temporal and spatial resolution.


Optics Letters | 2011

Characterization of high-intensity sub-4-fs laser pulses using spatially encoded spectral shearing interferometry

Tobias Witting; F. Frank; Christopher Arrell; W. A. Okell; Jonathan P. Marangos; J. W. G. Tisch

We report on the full amplitude and phase characterization of high-intensity few-cycle laser pulses generated in a single-stage hollow core fiber system with subsequent compression by ultrabroadband chirped mirrors. We use a spatially-encoded arrangement (SEA) spectral phase interferometry for direct electric field reconstruction (SPIDER) with spectral filters for ancilla generation to characterize the sub-4 fs pulses with spatial resolution.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2008

Dynamic imaging of molecules using high order harmonic generation.

Jonathan P. Marangos; Sarah Baker; N. Kajumba; J. S. Robinson; J. W. G. Tisch; R. Torres

We review recent progress towards imaging the electronic wavefunctions and nuclear dynamics of small molecules using the high order harmonics emitted when a molecule experiences an intense laser field. We illustrate that the essence of high harmonic emission is contained in the recombination amplitude between the continuum portion of the electronic wavefunction, that is formed through field ionization and which is accelerated and driven back to recollide in the laser field, and the bound electronic state. We review for the non-specialist some recent experimental and theoretical work dealing with high harmonic generation (HHG) in molecules. Particular attention is paid to two types of experiment recently performed in our group. The first of these types of experiment is the measurement of signatures of molecular electronic structure using HHG from molecules with a fixed orientation in space. The second is the use of HHG to track extremely fast proton rearrangement following ionization in light molecules, using the intrinsic temporal variation of the recolliding electron energy to extract these dynamics from measurements of the high harmonics.


Nature | 1999

Slow light in cool atoms

Jonathan P. Marangos

An experiment with atoms at nanokelvin temperatures has produced the remarkable observation of light pulses travelling at velocities of only 17 m s−1. The large optical nonlinearities seen in this system may open up new opportunities in quantum optics. An experiment with atoms at nanokelvin temperatures has produced the remarkable observation of light pulses travelling at velocities of only 17 m s−1. The large optical nonlinearities seen in this system may open up new opportunities in quantum optics.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012

Invited review article: technology for attosecond science.

F. Frank; Christopher A. Arrell; Tobias Witting; W. A. Okell; J. McKenna; J. S. Robinson; C. A. Haworth; Dane R. Austin; H. Teng; Ian A. Walmsley; Jonathan P. Marangos; J. W. G. Tisch

We describe a complete technological system at Imperial College London for Attosecond Science studies. The system comprises a few-cycle, carrier envelope phase stabilized laser source which delivers sub 4 fs pulses to a vibration-isolated attosecond vacuum beamline. The beamline is used for the generation of isolated attosecond pulses in the extreme ultraviolet (XUV) at kilohertz repetition rates through laser-driven high harmonic generation in gas targets. The beamline incorporates: interferometers for producing pulse sequences for pump-probe studies; the facility to spectrally and spatially filter the harmonic radiation; an in-line spatially resolving XUV spectrometer; and a photoelectron spectroscopy chamber in which attosecond streaking is used to characterize the attosecond pulses. We discuss the technology and techniques behind the development of our complete system and summarize its performance. This versatile apparatus has enabled a number of new experimental investigations which we briefly describe.


Journal of Physics B | 2012

Sub-4-fs laser pulse characterization by spatially resolved spectral shearing interferometry and attosecond streaking

Tobias Witting; F. Frank; W. A. Okell; Christopher Arrell; Jonathan P. Marangos; J. W. G. Tisch

We demonstrate the generation of high-energy sub-2-cycle laser pulses generated through hollow core fibre pulse compression. We demonstrate their full characterization with two independent methods. For all-optical characterization in amplitude and spectral phase, we employ spatially encoded arrangement spectral phase interferometry for direct electric-field reconstruction using spectrally filtered ancilla beams to characterize the sub-4-fs pulses with spatial resolution. For field-sensitive pulse characterization, we generate isolated attosecond pulses around 93 eV. The attosecond pulse as well as the infrared few-cycle pulse is characterized in amplitude and phase using the frequency resolved optical gating for complete reconstruction of the attosecond bursts technique. We find good agreement between the two methods.


Journal of Physics B | 2012

High-order harmonic generation in graphite plasma plumes using ultrashort laser pulses: a systematic analysis of harmonic radiation and plasma conditions

R. A. Ganeev; C. Hutchison; Tobias Witting; F. Frank; W. A. Okell; A. Zaïr; Sébastien Weber; P.V. Redkin; Dang Yuan Lei; Tyler Roschuk; Stefan A. Maier; Ignacio Lopez-Quintas; Margarita Martín; Marta Castillejo; J. W. G. Tisch; Jonathan P. Marangos

High-order harmonic generation in graphite-ablated plasmas was systematically studied using ultrashort (3.5 and 30 fs) laser pulses. We observed the efficient frequency conversion of 3.5 fs Ti:sapphire laser pulses in the range of 15-26 eV. Stabilization of the harmonic yield at a 1 kHz pulse repetition rate was accomplished using a rotating graphite target. We also show the results of harmonic generation in carbon plasma using 1300 nm, 40 ps pulses, which allowed the extension of the harmonic cutoff while maintaining a comparable conversion efficiency to the case of 780 nm driving radiation. The time-of-flight mass spectrometric analysis of the plasma components and the scanning electron microscopy of plasma debris under optimal conditions for harmonic generation suggest the presence of small carbon clusters (C10-C30 )i n the plasma plume at the moment of femtosecond pulse propagation, which further aggregate on nearby substrates. We present the results of plasma spectroscopy obtained under unoptimized plasma conditions that elucidate the reduction in harmonic signal. We also present calculations of plasma concentration under different excitation conditions of the ablated graphite target. (Some figures may appear in colour only in the online journal)


Optics Letters | 2004

High-order stimulated Raman scattering in a highly transient regime driven by a pair of ultrashort pulses

Emiliano Sali; Kirstie J. Mendham; J. W. G. Tisch; Thomas Halfmann; Jonathan P. Marangos

We demonstrate efficient generation of high-order anti-Stokes Raman sidebands in a highly transient regime, using a pair of approximately 100-fs laser pulses tuned to Raman resonance with vibrational transitions in methane or hydrogen. The use of this technique looks promising for efficient subfemtosecond pulse generation.


Optics Letters | 2012

Stable generation of high-order harmonics of femtosecond laser radiation from laser produced plasma plumes at 1 kHz pulse repetition rate.

C. Hutchison; R. A. Ganeev; Tobias Witting; F. Frank; W. A. Okell; J. W. G. Tisch; Jonathan P. Marangos

We present a method for the creation of stable weakly ionized plasmas from laser ablation of solid targets using a 1 kHz pulse repetition rate laser, which can be used for stable high-order harmonic generation from plasma plumes. The plasma plumes were generated from cylindrical rotating targets. Without target rotation the intensity of harmonics in the 40-80 nm range drops by more than one order of magnitude during less than 10(3) shots, while, with rotation of the target at typically 30 revolutions per minute, stable emission of high-order harmonics from aluminum plasma plumes with variation of less than 10% was maintained for >10(6) laser shots.


Nature | 2000

Faster than a speeding photon

Jonathan P. Marangos

The textbooks say nothing can travel faster than light, not even light itself. New experiments show that this is no longer true, raising questions about the maximum speed at which we can send information.

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W. A. Okell

Imperial College London

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C. Hutchison

Imperial College London

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F. Frank

Imperial College London

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A. Zaïr

Imperial College London

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R. A. Ganeev

Saitama Medical University

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