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Polarizing Free Electrons in Optical Near Fields. | LitMetric

Polarizing Free Electrons in Optical Near Fields.

Phys Rev Lett

Institute of Quantum Materials and Physics, Henan Academy of Sciences, Zhengzhou 450046, China.

Published: May 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers have developed a method to polarize electron beams using light, overcoming the challenge of needing high laser intensities typically found in previous approaches.
  • By utilizing a transverse electric optical near field on nanostructures, they effectively polarize electrons through strong inelastic scattering, mimicking the Stern-Gerlach experiment but in terms of energy states.
  • Their findings suggest that with significantly lower laser intensity and a short interaction length, they can produce highly spin-polarized electron beams with high spin purity, paving the way for advancements in material science and high-energy physics.

Article Abstract

Polarizing electron beams using light is highly desirable but exceedingly challenging, as the approaches proposed in previous studies using free-space light usually require enormous laser intensities. Here, we propose the use of a transverse electric optical near field, extended on nanostructures, to efficiently polarize an adjacent electron beam by exploiting the strong inelastic electron scattering in phase-matched optical near fields. Intriguingly, the two spin components of an unpolarized incident electron beam-parallel and antiparallel to the electric field-are spin-flipped and inelastically scattered to different energy states, providing an analog of the Stern-Gerlach experiment in the energy dimension. Our calculations show that when a dramatically reduced laser intensity of ∼10^{12}  W/cm^{2} and a short interaction length of 16  μm are used, an unpolarized incident electron beam interacting with the excited optical near field can produce two spin-polarized electron beams, both exhibiting near unity spin purity and a 6% brightness relative to the input beam. Our findings are important for optical control of free-electron spins, preparation of spin-polarized electron beams, and applications in material science and high-energy physics.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.130.186901DOI Listing

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