Nanoplasmonic electron acceleration by attosecond-controlled forward rescattering in silver clusters

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Abstract

In the strong-field photoemission from atoms, molecules, and surfaces, the fastest electrons emerge from tunneling and subsequent field-driven recollision, followed by elastic backscattering. This rescattering picture is central to attosecond science and enables control of the electron's trajectory via the sub-cycle evolution of the laser electric field. Here we reveal a so far unexplored route for waveform-controlled electron acceleration emerging from forward rescattering in resonant plasmonic systems. We studied plasmon-enhanced photoemission from silver clusters and found that the directional acceleration can be controlled up to high kinetic energy with the relative phase of a two-color laser field. Our analysis reveals that the cluster's plasmonic near-field establishes a sub-cycle directional gate that enables the selective acceleration. The identified generic mechanism offers robust attosecond control of the electron acceleration at plasmonic nanostructures, opening perspectives for laser-based sources of attosecond electron pulses.

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Passig, J., Zherebtsov, S., Irsig, R., Arbeiter, M., Peltz, C., Göde, S., … Fennel, T. (2017). Nanoplasmonic electron acceleration by attosecond-controlled forward rescattering in silver clusters. Nature Communications, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-01286-w

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