MEDEA https://www.medea-horizon2020.eu Molecular Electron Dynamics investigated by Intense Fields and Attosecond Pulses Thu, 08 Sep 2022 08:18:20 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://www.medea-horizon2020.eu/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/cropped-MEDEA_icon-32x32.png MEDEA https://www.medea-horizon2020.eu 32 32 Showcase your project! #InvestEUresearch https://www.medea-horizon2020.eu/showcase-your-project-investeuresearch/ Fri, 06 Apr 2018 11:11:20 +0000 http://www.medea-horizon2020.eu/?p=2139 Here  the MEDEA project video, for the contest Showcase your project!

Take a look at our video, share it and, if you appreciate, like it! 🙂



 

]]>
INTERNATIONAL DAY OF LIGHT 2018 https://www.medea-horizon2020.eu/international-day-of-light-2018/ Wed, 04 Apr 2018 16:21:07 +0000 http://www.medea-horizon2020.eu/?p=2127

The European project @MEDEA_H2020 promotes gender balance towards scientific subjects during the #STEMinthecity and participates in the International Day of Light 2018 opening the laboratories of the Department of Physics where light and matter meet.

]]>
Full professorship https://www.medea-horizon2020.eu/full-professorship/ Mon, 02 Apr 2018 20:25:48 +0000 http://www.medea-horizon2020.eu/?p=2148 This is to inform you that a full professorship in experimental attosecond physics is announced at the Department of Physics and Astronomy, Aarhus University.

Please circulate this call to potential applicants that you may know about.
The application deadline is April 18

]]>
Annual Meeting details and program https://www.medea-horizon2020.eu/annual-meeting-program/ Fri, 22 Sep 2017 10:11:17 +0000 http://www.medea-horizon2020.eu/?p=1761 MEDEA Project Meeting: details and program

Meeting: Nice 2017

 

]]>
Summer School program https://www.medea-horizon2020.eu/summer-school-program/ Tue, 12 Sep 2017 15:21:19 +0000 http://www.medea-horizon2020.eu/?p=1715 Here you can find the final program of the 3rd MEDEA School

MEDEA Summer School: Technology & Innovation Management

]]>
Next Annual Meeting in Nice https://www.medea-horizon2020.eu/next-annual-meeting-in-nice/ Tue, 25 Jul 2017 15:32:59 +0000 http://www.medea-horizon2020.eu/?p=1692 Continue reading Next Annual Meeting in Nice ]]> 9th & 10th October 2017 – NICE “West End Hotel” 

Dear SCIENTIST, PARTNERS and FELLOWS, you are invited to partecipate to the 4th Annual Meeting of the Medea project that will be in Nice on 9th & 10th October 2017!

The Meeting will start on  9th  at 9.30 and will finish on 10th at the 13.00. The location will be “West End Hotel”

It is easily reachable from the Nice airport. For more information please see the link:

http://www.hotel-westend.com/fr/

 

 

]]>
Looking into complex light waveforms https://www.medea-horizon2020.eu/looking-into-complex-light-waveforms/ Thu, 08 Jun 2017 07:58:43 +0000 http://www.medea-horizon2020.eu/?p=1604 Continue reading Looking into complex light waveforms ]]> Exploiting attosecond light pulses it is now possible to observe in time visible and near-infrared pulses with a complex polarization states.

Experimental measurement of a light-pulse with a complex polarization state.

Light pulses are electromagnetic wave, which are fully described by the evolution in space and time of two vectors: the electric and the magnetic field. During the propagation of a light pulse, these vectors can describe very complex trajectories (for example they can rotate along a circle or describe an ellipse or any mixed combination), which correspond to different polarization states of the radiation. The polarization of an electromagnetic pulse is a key parameter in the light–matter interaction, as it determines the characteristics, for example, of the electrons emitted from atoms, molecules, or solid samples. Observing the “dance” of the electric and magnetic fields is extremely challenging as their motion occurs on the timescale of a few hundreds of attoseconds (1as =10-18 s), which is much faster than any conventional electronic or opto-electronic instrument.
Exploiting a novel approach based on the spatial interference of two isolated attosecond pulses, an international team led by Prof. Dr. Giuseppe Sansone has achieved a full characterization of weak light pulses characterized by a complex evolution of the electric field (as shown in figure).
Attosecond technology is an extremely innovative and powerful tool for the control electronic dynamics and reactions occurring in all states of matter. Using these novel tools, we have generated electronic wave packets lasting only a few hundreds of attoseconds. During their motion electrons are extremely sensitive to external perturbations, and we have exploited this characteristic to gently modify their trajectories using weak visible light pulses. Finally, we have measured the distortions of the electron trajectory, deriving the intensity and the direction of the weak perturbation.
This novel technique offers for the first time the possibility to fully characterize extremely weak visible radiation with a generic polarization state, thus extending visible metrology to a large range of applications. For example, in the future, using our approach, it will be possible to gain complete access to the electronic motion occurring in solids, by measuring the visible light reflected from its surface.
Researchers from the University of Jena, Max-Planck Institute for nuclear Physics in Heidelberg, PTB in Braunschweig, Politecnico Milano, and IFN-CNR in Padua, significantly contributed to these results.

Original publication:
P. A. Carpeggiani et al. (2017): Vectorial optical field reconstruction by attosecond spatial interferometry.
In: Nature Photonics. DOI 10.1038/nphoton.2017.73

]]>