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Nature Physics
Published online: 25 October 2009 | doi:10.1038/nphys1430

Controlling X-rays with light

T. E. Glover1, M. P. Hertlein1, S. H. Southworth2, T. K. Allison1,3, J. van Tilborg1, E. P. Kanter2, B. Krässig2, H. R. Varma2, B. Rude1, R. Santra2,4, A. Belkacem1 & L. Young2


Ultrafast X-ray science is an exciting frontier that promises the visualization of electronic, atomic and molecular dynamics on atomic time and length scales. A largely unexplored area of ultrafast X-ray science is the use of light to control how X-rays interact with matter. To extend control concepts established for long-wavelength probes to the X-ray regime, the optical control field must drive a coherent electronic response on a timescale comparable to femtosecond core-hole lifetimes. An intense field is required to achieve this rapid response. Here, an intense optical control pulse is observed to efficiently modulate photoelectric absorption for X-rays and to create an ultrafast transparency window. We demonstrate an application of X-ray transparency relevant to ultrafast X-ray sources: an all-photonic temporal cross-correlation measurement of a femtosecond X-ray pulse. The ability to control X-ray–matter interactions with light will create new opportunities for present and next-generation X-ray light sources.