resulted in a significant improvement in data quality as well as enabled carrier density dependent studies. We were able to quantify the oscillation frequency and the lattice coordinate the oscillations are occurring about from the time-resolved data. With this information we extrapolated the curvature and minima positions of the double well interatomic potential of bismuth as a function of photoexcited carrier density. Our results were compared to previous density functional calculations of the photoexcited system and are in agreement [3]. Electro-optic sampling methods were used to time the excitation laser pulse with the x-ray probe pulse [4]. In this technique, the electric field of the electron bunch that generated x-rays at the SPPS is used to alter the optical properties of an electro-optic crystal (Figure 2). This alteration is probed with a portion of the optical laser that is used to photoexcite the bismuth sample in crossed-beam geometry. Only the portion of the laser that is propagating within the electro-optic crystal when the electric filed is present will be altered. In this manner, the arrival time of the electron bunch is encoded onto spatial profile of the optical laser. The centroid of the electro-optic feature is used to time stamp each x-ray pulse and the data is compiled accordingly.
These measurements have furthered our understanding of bismuth dynamics far from equilibrium. Our experiments provide the first quantitative characterization of the curvature and quasi-equilibrium position of the interatomic potential of a solid close to a free-carrier induced phase transition. From this, we showed that the electronic softening of the potential is the primary factor determining the frequency of the lattice vibrations. The experiments also demonstrate the successful implementation of an electro-optic timing diagnostic. This technical advancement enabled us to perform femtosecond resolution experiments at a linear accelerator based x-ray source. The experiments were carried out by a collaborative team from 20 different institutions. Portions of this research were supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Science through direct support for the SPPS and the SSRL. Additional support was received by the Swedish Research Council for Science, the Irish Research Council for Science, the Keck Foundation, the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, the European Union RTN FLASH, the Austrian Academy of Science, the Stanford PULSE center and the NSF FOCUS frontier center.
http://ssrl.slac.stanford.edu/research/highlights_archive/spps07.pdf
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