Physics Colloquium: Attosecond electron dynamics in Dirac materials and tunneling junctions
Michael Krüger, Department of Physics, Technion, Haifa
Abstract:
Attosecond science (1 attosecond = 10-18 s) is based on the control of electron motion by the field waveform of intense ultrashort laser pulses. In our research, we apply field waveform control to investigate signatures of many-body electron dynamics of bulk solids, nanostructures and molecules on ultrafast time scales. In a first experiment [1], we study ultrashort electron dynamics in highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG), which retains much of the Dirac physics of monolayer graphene. We find a strong carrier excitation effect near the Dirac point, which leads to a suppression of the emission of higher harmonic light. Our experiment is able to track the underlying excitation dynamics and suppression caused by state filling. Surprisingly, we also observe the emergence of squeezed harmonic light, paving a novel way to generate nonclassical light using extreme nonlinear optics. In a second research avenue, we integrate a conventional scanning tunneling microscope (STM) with an ultrafast femtosecond laser ångström and attosecond observations of plasmonic dynamics and ultrafast many-body phenomena in matter.
[1] Z. Chen et al., arXiv:2505.24290 (2025).
[2] D. Davidovich et al., arXiv:2507.10252 (2025)
Event Organizer: Dr. Tobias Holder

