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Turning solid aluminium transparent by intense soft X-ray photoionization

Author
Abstract

Saturable absorption is a phenomenon readily seen in the optical and infrared wavelengths. It has never been observed in core-electron transitions owing to the short lifetime of the excited states involved and the high intensities of the soft X-rays needed. We report saturable absorption of an L-shell transition in aluminium using record intensities over 10(16)W cm(-2) at a photon energy of 92 eV. From a consideration of the relevant timescales, we infer that immediately after the X-rays have passed, the sample is in an exotic state where all of the aluminium atoms have an L-shell hole, and the valence band has approximately a 9 eV temperature, whereas the atoms are still on their crystallographic positions. Subsequently, Auger decay heats the material to the warm dense matter regime, at around 25 eV temperatures. The method is an ideal candidate to study homogeneous warm dense matter, highly relevant to planetary science, astrophysics and inertial confinement fusion.

Year of Publication
2009
Journal
Nature Physics
Volume
5
Number
9
Number of Pages
693-696
Date Published
Sep
Type of Article
Article
ISBN Number
1745-2473
Accession Number
ISI:000270095600024
URL
<Go to ISI>://000270095600024
PId
0806625cbcadd249fab1337a849a80af
Alternate Journal
Nat. Phys.
Journal Article
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