Coherent diffractive imaging of single helium nanodroplets with a high harmonic generation source

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Abstract

Coherent diffractive imaging of individual free nanoparticles has opened routes for the in situ analysis of their transient structural, optical, and electronic properties. So far, single-shot single-particle diffraction was assumed to be feasible only at extreme ultraviolet and X-ray free-electron lasers, restricting this research field to large-scale facilities. Here we demonstrate single-shot imaging of isolated helium nanodroplets using extreme ultraviolet pulses from a femtosecond-laser-driven high harmonic source. We obtain bright wide-Angle scattering patterns, that allow us to uniquely identify hitherto unresolved prolate shapes of superfluid helium droplets. Our results mark the advent of single-shot gas-phase nanoscopy with lab-based short-wavelength pulses and pave the way to ultrafast coherent diffractive imaging with phase-controlled multicolor fields and attosecond pulses.

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Rupp, D., Monserud, N., Langbehn, B., Sauppe, M., Zimmermann, J., Ovcharenko, Y., … Rouzée, A. (2017). Coherent diffractive imaging of single helium nanodroplets with a high harmonic generation source. Nature Communications, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-00287-z

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