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Dive into the research topics where Tim Laarmann is active.

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Featured researches published by Tim Laarmann.


Optics Express | 2016

High-repetition-rate and high-photon-flux 70 eV high-harmonic source for coincidence ion imaging of gas-phase molecules

Jan Rothhardt; Steffen Hädrich; Yariv Shamir; M. Tschnernajew; Robert Klas; Armin Hoffmann; Getnet K. Tadesse; Arno Klenke; Thomas Gottschall; Tino Eidam; Jens Limpert; Andreas Tünnermann; Rebecca Boll; Cédric Bomme; Hatem Dachraoui; Benjamin Erk; M. Di Fraia; Daniel A. Horke; Thomas Kierspel; Terry Mullins; A. Przystawik; Evgeny Savelyev; Joss Wiese; Tim Laarmann; Jochen Küpper; Daniel Rolles

Unraveling and controlling chemical dynamics requires techniques to image structural changes of molecules with femtosecond temporal and picometer spatial resolution. Ultrashort-pulse x-ray free-electron lasers have significantly advanced the field by enabling advanced pump-probe schemes. There is an increasing interest in using table-top photon sources enabled by high-harmonic generation of ultrashort-pulse lasers for such studies. We present a novel high-harmonic source driven by a 100 kHz fiber laser system, which delivers 1011 photons/s in a single 1.3 eV bandwidth harmonic at 68.6 eV. The combination of record-high photon flux and high repetition rate paves the way for time-resolved studies of the dissociation dynamics of inner-shell ionized molecules in a coincidence detection scheme. First coincidence measurements on CH3I are shown and it is outlined how the anticipated advancement of fiber laser technology and improved sample delivery will, in the next step, allow pump-probe studies of ultrafast molecular dynamics with table-top XUV-photon sources. These table-top sources can provide significantly higher repetition rates than the currently operating free-electron lasers and they offer very high temporal resolution due to the intrinsically small timing jitter between pump and probe pulses.


Nature Communications | 2017

Attosecond interferometry with self-amplified spontaneous emission of a free-electron laser

Sergey Usenko; Andreas Przystawik; Markus Jakob; Leslie Lamberto Lazzarino; Günter Brenner; Sven Toleikis; Christian Haunhorst; Detlef Kip; Tim Laarmann

Light-phase-sensitive techniques, such as coherent multidimensional spectroscopy, are well-established in a broad spectral range, already spanning from radio-frequencies in nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to visible and ultraviolet wavelengths in nonlinear optics with table-top lasers. In these cases, the ability to tailor the phases of electromagnetic waves with high precision is essential. Here we achieve phase control of extreme-ultraviolet pulses from a free-electron laser (FEL) on the attosecond timescale in a Michelson-type all-reflective interferometric autocorrelator. By varying the relative phase of the generated pulse replicas with sub-cycle precision we observe the field interference, that is, the light-wave oscillation with a period of 129u2009as. The successful transfer of a powerful optical method towards short-wavelength FEL science and technology paves the way towards utilization of advanced nonlinear methodologies even at partially coherent soft X-ray FEL sources that rely on self-amplified spontaneous emission.


New Journal of Physics | 2016

Femtosecond dynamics of correlated many-body states in C60 fullerenes

Sergey Usenko; Michael Schüler; Armin Azima; Markus Jakob; Leslie Lamberto Lazzarino; Yaroslav Pavlyukh; A. Przystawik; Markus Drescher; Tim Laarmann; J. Berakdar

Fullerene complexes may play a key role in the design of future molecular electronics and nanostructured devices with potential applications in light harvesting using organic solar cells. Charge and energy flow in these systems is mediated by many-body effects. We studied the structure and dynamics of laser-induced multi-electron excitations in isolated C60 by two-photon photoionization as a function of excitation wavelength using a tunable fs UV laser and developed a corresponding theoretical framework on the basis of ab initio calculations. The measured resonance line width gives direct information on the excited state lifetime. From the spectral deconvolution we derive a lower limit for purely electronic relaxation on the order of fs. Energy dissipation towards nuclear degrees of freedom is studied with time-resolved techniques. The evaluation of the nonlinear autocorrelation trace gives a characteristic time constant of fs for the exponential decay. In line with the experiment, the observed transient dynamics is explained theoretically by nonadiabatic (vibronic) couplings involving the correlated electronic, the nuclear degrees of freedom (accounting for the Herzberg–Teller coupling), and their interplay.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Mapping few-femtosecond slices of ultra-relativistic electron bunches

Tim Plath; Christoph Lechner; Velizar Miltchev; Philipp Amstutz; Nagitha Ekanayake; Leslie Lamberto Lazzarino; Theophilos Maltezopoulos; Jörn Bödewadt; Tim Laarmann; Jörg Roßbach

Free-electron lasers are unique sources of intense and ultra-short x-ray pulses that led to major scientific breakthroughs across disciplines from matter to materials and life sciences. The essential element of these devices are micrometer-sized electron bunches with high peak currents, low energy spread, and low emittance. Advanced FEL concepts such as seeded amplifiers rely on the capability of analyzing and controlling the electron beam properties with few-femtosecond time resolution. One major challenge is to extract tomographic slice parameters instead of projected electron beam properties. Here, we demonstrate that a radio-frequency deflector in combination with a dipole spectrometer not only allows for single-shot extraction of a seeded FEL pulse profile, but also provides information on the electron slice emittance and energy spread. The seeded FEL power profile can be directly related to the derived slice emittance as a function of intra-bunch coordinate with a resolution down to a few femtoseconds.


Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2016

Free-electron laser multiplex driven by a superconducting linear accelerator.

Tim Plath; Philipp Amstutz; Jörn Bödewadt; Günter Brenner; Nagitha Ekanayake; Bart Faatz; Kirsten Hacker; Katja Honkavaara; Leslie Lamberto Lazzarino; Christoph Lechner; Theophilos Maltezopoulos; Matthias Scholz; Siegfried Schreiber; Mathias Vogt; Johann Zemella; Tim Laarmann

Free-electron lasers (FELs) generate femtosecond XUV and X-ray pulses at peak powers in the gigawatt range. The FEL user facility FLASH at DESY (Hamburg, Germany) is driven by a superconducting linear accelerator with up to 8000u2005pulses per second. Since 2014, two parallel undulator beamlines, FLASH1 and FLASH2, have been in operation. In addition to the main undulator, the FLASH1 beamline is equipped with an undulator section, sFLASH, dedicated to research and development of fully coherent extreme ultraviolet photon pulses using external seed lasers. In this contribution, the first simultaneous lasing of the three FELs at 13.4u2005nm, 20u2005nm and 38.8u2005nm is presented.


High-Brightness Sources and Light-Driven Interactions (2016), paper HT1B.2 | 2016

High Photon Flux 70 eV HHG Source for Applications in Molecular and Solid State Physics

Steffen Hädrich; Jan Rothhardt; Robert Klas; Maxim Tschernajew; Armin Hoffmann; Getnet K. Tadesse; Arno Klenke; Thomas Gottschall; Tino Eidam; Jens Limpert; Andreas Tünnermann; Rebecca Boll; Cédric Bomme; Hatem Dachraoui; Benjamin Erk; Michele Di Fraia; Daniel A. Horke; Thomas Kierspel; Terence Mullins; A. Przystawik; Evgeny Savelyev; Joss Wiese; Tim Laarmann; Jochen Küpper; Daniel Rolles; Moritz Barkowski; Sakshath Sadashivaiah; J. Urbancic; Martin Aeschlimann; Stefan Mathias

A 100 kHz high harmonic source with record high >1011 photons/s in single harmonics between 55-73 eV is presented. The unique capabilities are underlined by using it for coincidence experiments and measurements on magnetic samples.


Archive | 2010

FLASH II:A SEEDED FUTURE AT FLASH

Bart Faatz; N.Baboi; V.Bal; Winfried Decking; S. Düsterer; J. Feldhaus; Nina Golubeva; Tim Laarmann; T.Limberg; D.Nölle; E.Plönjes; Holger Schlarb; Siegfried Schreiber; Franz Tavella; K.I.Tiedtke; Rolf Treusch


6th International Particle Accelerator Conference | 2015

Recent Results from FEL seeding at FLASH

Joern Boedewadt; Ingmar Hartl; Shaukat Khan; Sven Ackermann; Guangyao Feng; Christoph Lechner; Jost Mueller; Joerg Rossbach; Rosen Ivanov; Velizar Miltchev; Bart Faatz; Philipp Amstutz; Takanori Tanikawa; Nagitha Ekanayake; Markus Drescher; Armin Azima; Kirsten Hacker; Leslie Lamberto Lazzarino; Theophilos Maltezopoulos; Robert Molo; Tim Laarmann; Tim Plath; Ralph Assmann


international free electron laser conference | 2014

Demonstration of SASE Suppression Through a Seeded Microbunching Instability

Christoph Lechner; Shaukat Khan; Sven Ackermann; Torsten Golz; Joerg Rossbach; Velizar Miltchev; Katja Honkavaara; M.V. Yurkov; E.A. Schneidmiller; Joern Boedewadt; Nagitha Ekanayake; Markus Drescher; Guenter Brenner; Armin Azima; Nikola Stojanovic; Kirsten Hacker; Leslie Lamberto Lazzarino; Theophilos Maltezopoulos; Martin Dohlus; Juliane Roensch-Schulenburg; Eugen Hass; Robert Molo; Tim Laarmann; Tim Plath; Torsten Limberg


Applied Physics B | 2014

A high-harmonic generation source for seeding a free-electron laser at 38 nm

Theophilos Maltezopoulos; Manuel Mittenzwey; Armin Azima; Jörn Bödewadt; Hatem Dachraoui; Marie Rehders; Christoph Lechner; Michael Schulz; Marek Wieland; Tim Laarmann; Jörg Roßbach; Markus Drescher

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Tim Plath

University of Hamburg

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Shaukat Khan

Technical University of Dortmund

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