Electron tunneling in atoms has now been observed in real time by a
German-Austrian-Dutch team (Ferenc Krausz, Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics
and Ludwig
Maximilians University Munich, ferenc.krausz@mpq.mpg.de)
using light pulses lasting only several hundred attoseconds (billionths
of a billionth of a second), providing new glimpses into an important
ultrafast process in nature.
An electron bound to an atom is at the bottom of a sort of energy
hill. Escaping the atom usually requires the electron to get enough
energy to roll over this hill. So for example, hitting an atom with a
light pulse delivering photons of sufficient energy can allow the
electron to escape.
However, if an atom is bathed in a shower of lower-energy photons,
there is the chance that an electron, if located at the periphery of the
atom, can escape even though it doesn't have quite enough energy. This
is through the phenomenon of quantum tunneling, in which there is a
small chance that the electron can in effect burrow through the energy
hill.
The tunneling process is responsible for the operation of certain
electronic components, such as scanning tunneling microscopes, Esaki
(tunneling) diodes, and quantum-cascade lasers. And in nuclear fission,
alpha particles (two protons plus two neutrons) are believed to escape
the fracturing nucleus through tunneling. Yet the tunneling process
occurs so quickly, on the scale of attoseconds, that it has not been
possible to observe directly. With the recent ability to create
attosecond-scale light pulses--pioneered by Krausz and others--this is
now possible.
In the new experiment, a gas of neon atoms is exposed to two light
pulses. One is an intense pulse containing low-energy red photons. The
second pulse is an attosecond-length pulse of ultraviolet light. This
ultraviolet attosecond pulse delivers photons so energetic that they can
rip off an electron and promote a second one to the periphery of the
atom, into an excited quantum state.
Then, the intense red pulse, consisting of just a few wave cycles
(peaks and valleys), has a chance to liberate the outlying electron via
light-field-induced tunneling. Indeed, the researchers saw this
phenomenon, predicted theoretically forty years ago but only verified
now for the first time experimentally in a direct time-resolved study.
As each wave crest in the few-cycle red pulse coursed through the atoms,
the electrons each time upped their probability of escaping through
tunneling until it reached about 100%.
The data indicate that, in this particular system, the electrons
escape via tunneling in three discrete steps, synchronized with the
three most intense wave crests at the center of the few-cycle laser
wave. Each step lasts less than 400 attoseconds. (Uiberacker et
al, Nature, 5 April
2007; also see press release with figures and more information at http://www.mpq.mpg.de/)