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Dive into the research topics where P. Finetti is active.

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Featured researches published by P. Finetti.


Nature Photonics | 2016

Coherent control with a short-wavelength free-electron laser

Kevin C. Prince; E. Allaria; C. Callegari; Riccardo Cucini; G. De Ninno; S. Di Mitri; B. Diviacco; Enrico Ferrari; P. Finetti; D. Gauthier; L. Giannessi; N. Mahne; G. Penco; Oksana Plekan; Lorenzo Raimondi; P. Rebernik; Eléonore Roussel; Cristian Svetina; M. Trovo; M. Zangrando; M. Negro; Paolo A. Carpeggiani; Maurizio Reduzzi; Giuseppe Sansone; A N Grum-Grzhimailo; E V Gryzlova; S. I. Strakhova; Klaus Bartschat; Nicolas Douguet; Joel Venzke

Researchers demonstrate correlation of two colours (63.0 and 31.5 nm wavelengths) in a free-electron laser and control photoelectron angular distribution by adjusting phase with 3 attosecond resolution.


Journal of Physics B | 2013

A modular end-station for atomic, molecular, and cluster science at the low density matter beamline of FERMI@Elettra

Victor Lyamayev; Y. Ovcharenko; R. Katzy; Michele Devetta; Lukas Bruder; A. C. LaForge; M. Mudrich; Ulrich Person; F. Stienkemeier; Maria Krikunova; T. Möller; P. Piseri; L. Avaldi; M. Coreno; P. O’Keeffe; P. Bolognesi; Michele Alagia; A. Kivimäki; Michele Di Fraia; Nils Benedict Brauer; Marcel Drabbels; T. Mazza; Stefano Stranges; P. Finetti; Cesare Grazioli; Oksana Plekan; R. Richter; Kevin C. Prince; C. Callegari

The low density matter end-station at the new seeded free electron laser FERMI@Elettra is a versatile instrument for the study of atoms, molecules and clusters by means of electron and ion spectroscopies. Beams of atoms, molecules and helium droplets as well as clusters of atoms, molecules and metals can be produced by three different pulsed valves. The atomic and molecular beams may be seeded, and the clusters and droplets may be pure, or doped with other atoms and molecules. The electrons and ions produced by the ionization and fragmentation of the samples by the intense light of FERMI can be analysed by the available spectrometers, to give mass spectra and energy as well as angular distributions of charged particles. The design of the detector allows simultaneous detection of electrons and ions using velocity map imaging and time-of-flight techniques respectively. The instruments have a high energy/mass resolution and large solid-angle collection efficiency. We describe the current status of the apparatus and illustrate the potential for future experiments.


Nature Communications | 2014

Determining the polarization state of an extreme ultraviolet free-electron laser beam using atomic circular dichroism

T. Mazza; M. Ilchen; A.J. Rafipoor; C. Callegari; P. Finetti; Oksana Plekan; Kevin C. Prince; R. Richter; M.B. Danailov; Alexander Demidovich; G. De Ninno; Cesare Grazioli; R. Ivanov; N. Mahne; Lorenzo Raimondi; Cristian Svetina; L. Avaldi; P. Bolognesi; M. Coreno; Patrick O'Keeffe; M. Di Fraia; Michele Devetta; Y. Ovcharenko; Th. Möller; V. Lyamayev; F. Stienkemeier; S. Düsterer; K. Ueda; John T. Costello; A. K. Kazansky

Ultrafast extreme ultraviolet and X-ray free-electron lasers are set to revolutionize many domains such as bio-photonics and materials science, in a manner similar to optical lasers over the past two decades. Although their number will grow steadily over the coming decade, their complete characterization remains an elusive goal. This represents a significant barrier to their wider adoption and hence to the full realization of their potential in modern photon sciences. Although a great deal of progress has been made on temporal characterization and wavefront measurements at ultrahigh extreme ultraviolet and X-ray intensities, only few, if any progress on accurately measuring other key parameters such as the state of polarization has emerged. Here we show that by combining ultra-short extreme ultraviolet free electron laser pulses from FERMI with near-infrared laser pulses, we can accurately measure the polarization state of a free electron laser beam in an elegant, non-invasive and straightforward manner using circular dichroism.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Collective Autoionization in Multiply-Excited Systems: A novel ionization process observed in Helium Nanodroplets

A. C. LaForge; Marcel Drabbels; Nils Benedict Brauer; M. Coreno; Michele Devetta; M. Di Fraia; P. Finetti; Cesare Grazioli; R. Katzy; V. Lyamayev; T. Mazza; M. Mudrich; Patrick O'Keeffe; Y. Ovcharenko; P. Piseri; Oksana Plekan; Kevin C. Prince; R. Richter; Stefano Stranges; C. Callegari; T. Möller; F. Stienkemeier

Free electron lasers (FELs) offer the unprecedented capability to study reaction dynamics and image the structure of complex systems. When multiple photons are absorbed in complex systems, a plasma-like state is formed where many atoms are ionized on a femtosecond timescale. If multiphoton absorption is resonantly-enhanced, the system becomes electronically-excited prior to plasma formation, with subsequent decay paths which have been scarcely investigated to date. Here, we show using helium nanodroplets as an example that these systems can decay by a new type of process, named collective autoionization. In addition, we show that this process is surprisingly efficient, leading to ion abundances much greater than that of direct single-photon ionization. This novel collective ionization process is expected to be important in many other complex systems, e.g. macromolecules and nanoparticles, exposed to high intensity radiation fields.


Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2015

The Low Density Matter (LDM) beamline at FERMI: optical layout and first commissioning

Cristian Svetina; Cesare Grazioli; N. Mahne; Lorenzo Raimondi; Claudio Fava; Marco Zangrando; Simone Gerusina; Michele Alagia; L. Avaldi; G. Cautero; Monica de Simone; Michele Devetta; Michele Di Fraia; Marcel Drabbels; Vitaliy Feyer; P. Finetti; R. Katzy; A. Kivimäki; V. Lyamayev; T. Mazza; Angelica Moise; T. Möller; Patrick O'Keeffe; Y. Ovcharenko; P. Piseri; Oksana Plekan; Kevin C. Prince; Rudi Sergo; F. Stienkemeier; Stefano Stranges

A description of the LDM beamline of FERMI is given, with a detailed description of the photon transport.


Nature Communications | 2016

Chirped pulse amplification in an extreme-ultraviolet free-electron laser

D. Gauthier; E. Allaria; M. Coreno; Ivan Cudin; Hugo Dacasa; M.B. Danailov; Alexander Demidovich; Simone Di Mitri; B. Diviacco; Eugenio Ferrari; P. Finetti; Fabio Frassetto; D. Garzella; S. Künzel; Vincent Leroux; B. Mahieu; N. Mahne; Michael Meyer; T. Mazza; Paolo Miotti; G. Penco; Lorenzo Raimondi; Primož Rebernik Ribič; R. Richter; Eléonore Roussel; Sebastian Schulz; Luca Sturari; Cristian Svetina; M. Trovo; Paul Andreas Walker

Chirped pulse amplification in optical lasers is a revolutionary technique, which allows the generation of extremely powerful femtosecond pulses in the infrared and visible spectral ranges. Such pulses are nowadays an indispensable tool for a myriad of applications, both in fundamental and applied research. In recent years, a strong need emerged for light sources producing ultra-short and intense laser-like X-ray pulses, to be used for experiments in a variety of disciplines, ranging from physics and chemistry to biology and material sciences. This demand was satisfied by the advent of short-wavelength free-electron lasers. However, for any given free-electron laser setup, a limit presently exists in the generation of ultra-short pulses carrying substantial energy. Here we present the experimental implementation of chirped pulse amplification on a seeded free-electron laser in the extreme-ultraviolet, paving the way to the generation of fully coherent sub-femtosecond gigawatt pulses in the water window (2.3–4.4 nm).


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Circular Dichroism in Multiphoton Ionization of Resonantly Excited He^{+} Ions.

M. Ilchen; Nicolas Douguet; T. Mazza; A.J. Rafipoor; C. Callegari; P. Finetti; Oksana Plekan; Kevin C. Prince; Alexander Demidovich; Cesare Grazioli; L. Avaldi; P. Bolognesi; M. Coreno; M. Di Fraia; Michele Devetta; Y. Ovcharenko; S. Düsterer; K. Ueda; Klaus Bartschat; A N Grum-Grzhimailo; A. V. Bozhevolnov; A. K. Kazansky; N M Kabachnik; Michael Meyer

Intense, circularly polarized extreme-ultraviolet and near-infrared (NIR) laser pulses are combined to double ionize atomic helium via the oriented intermediate He^{+}(3p) resonance state. Applying angle-resolved electron spectroscopy, we find a large photon helicity dependence of the spectrum and the angular distribution of the electrons ejected from the resonance by NIR multiphoton absorption. The measured circular dichroism is unexpectedly found to vary strongly as a function of the NIR intensity. The experimental data are well described by theoretical modeling and possible mechanisms are discussed.


Nature Communications | 2018

Acetylacetone photodynamics at a seeded free-electron laser

R. J. Squibb; Marin Sapunar; Aurora Ponzi; R. Richter; A. Kivimäki; Oksana Plekan; P. Finetti; Nicolas Sisourat; Vitali Zhaunerchyk; T. Marchenko; L. Journel; Renaud Guillemin; Riccardo Cucini; M. Coreno; Cesare Grazioli; M. Di Fraia; C. Callegari; Kevin C. Prince; P. Decleva; Marc Simon; John H. D. Eland; Nađa Došlić; Raimund Feifel; M. N. Piancastelli

The first steps in photochemical processes, such as photosynthesis or animal vision, involve changes in electronic and geometric structure on extremely short time scales. Time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy is a natural way to measure such changes, but has been hindered hitherto by limitations of available pulsed light sources in the vacuum-ultraviolet and soft X-ray spectral region, which have insufficient resolution in time and energy simultaneously. The unique combination of intensity, energy resolution, and femtosecond pulse duration of the FERMI-seeded free-electron laser can now provide exceptionally detailed information on photoexcitation–deexcitation and fragmentation in pump-probe experiments on the 50-femtosecond time scale. For the prototypical system acetylacetone we report here electron spectra measured as a function of time delay with enough spectral and time resolution to follow several photoexcited species through well-characterized individual steps, interpreted using state-of-the-art static and dynamics calculations. These results open the way for investigations of photochemical processes in unprecedented detail.The first steps in photochemical processes involve changes in electronic and geometric structure on extremely short timescales. Here, the authors report femtosecond dynamics in prototypical acetylacetone, by pump-probe photoexcitation-photoemission experiments and static and dynamics calculations.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Slow Interatomic Coulombic Decay of Multiply Excited Neon Clusters

D. Iablonskyi; K. Nagaya; H. Fukuzawa; K. Motomura; Yoshiaki Kumagai; S. Mondal; T. Tachibana; Tsukasa Takanashi; T. Nishiyama; K. Matsunami; Per Johnsson; P. Piseri; Giuseppe Sansone; Antoine Dubrouil; Maurizio Reduzzi; Paolo Carpeggiani; Caterina Vozzi; Michele Devetta; M. Negro; Francesca Calegari; Andrea Trabattoni; M. C. Castrovilli; Davide Faccialà; Y. Ovcharenko; T. Möller; M. Mudrich; F. Stienkemeier; M. Coreno; Michele Alagia; B. Schütte

Ne clusters (∼5000  atoms) were resonantly excited (2p→3s) by intense free electron laser (FEL) radiation at FERMI. Such multiply excited clusters can decay nonradiatively via energy exchange between at least two neighboring excited atoms. Benefiting from the precise tunability and narrow bandwidth of seeded FEL radiation, specific sites of the Ne clusters were probed. We found that the relaxation of cluster surface atoms proceeds via a sequence of interatomic or intermolecular Coulombic decay (ICD) processes while ICD of bulk atoms is additionally affected by the surrounding excited medium via inelastic electron scattering. For both cases, cluster excitations relax to atomic states prior to ICD, showing that this kind of ICD is rather slow (picosecond range). Controlling the average number of excitations per cluster via the FEL intensity allows a coarse tuning of the ICD rate.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Polarization measurement of free electron laser pulses in the VUV generated by the variable polarization source FERMI

P. Finetti; E. Allaria; B. Diviacco; C. Callegari; B. Mahieu; Jens Viefhaus; Marco Zangrando; G. De Ninno; G. Lambert; Enrico Ferrari; Jens Buck; M. Ilchen; Boris Vodungbo; N. Mahne; Cristian Svetina; C. Spezzani; S. Di Mitri; G. Penco; M. Trovo; William M. Fawley; P. Rebernik; D. Gauthier; Cesare Grazioli; M. Coreno; B. Ressel; A. Kivimäki; T. Mazza; Leif Glaser; Frank Scholz; Joern Seltmann

FERMI, based at Elettra (Trieste, Italy) is the first free electron laser (FEL) facility operated for user experiments in seeded mode. Another unique property of FERMI, among other FEL sources, is to allow control of the polarization state of the radiation. Polarization dependence in the study of the interaction of coherent, high field, short-pulse ionizing radiation with matter, is a new frontier with potential in a wide range of research areas. The first measurement of the polarization-state of VUV light from a single-pass FEL was performed at FERMI FEL-1 operated in the 52 nm-26 nm range. Three different experimental techniques were used. The experiments were carried out at the end-station of two different beamlines to assess the impact of transport optics and provide polarization data for the end user. In this paper we summarize the results obtained from different setups. The results are consistent with each other and allow a general discussion about the viability of permanent diagnostics aimed at monitoring the polarization of FEL pulses.

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C. Callegari

Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste

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Kevin C. Prince

Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste

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Oksana Plekan

Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste

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Y. Ovcharenko

Technical University of Berlin

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R. Richter

Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste

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