<div class="csl-bib-body">
<div class="csl-entry">Weigner, T., Spielauer, T., Kolb, M., Boero, G., Rätzel, D., & Haslinger, P. (2025). Approaching Free-Electron – Bound-Electron Resonant Interactions with a Modulated Electron Beam. In <i>Electron Beam Spectroscopy for Nanophotonics 2025 : Book of Abstracts</i> (pp. 87–87). https://doi.org/10.34726/11540</div>
</div>
-
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12708/222144
-
dc.identifier.uri
https://doi.org/10.34726/11540
-
dc.description.abstract
Quantum optics with free-electrons is a promising field emerging based on the technology of electron microscopy [1]. One part of the framework of free-electron quantum optics is the resonant and coherent interaction of free-electrons with bound-electron systems [2]. Experimental access to this interaction is particularly challenging, since the bound-electron state has to couple directly to the near-field of the free electrons. With our experimental setup we are aiming to show this interaction for the first time [3]. In this proof of principle experiment (see Fig. 1), we utilize a modulated free-space electron beam in a customized scanning electron microscope, to coherently drive electron spins. The near-field of this spatially modulated beam excites Zeeman levels in a α,γ-Bisdiphenylen-β-phenylally (BDPA) sample placed in a magnetic field. These quantum transitions couple inductively to a micro-coil. The signal in the micro-coil is measured with a lock-in amplifier, sensitive down to the thermal noise floor. A successful implementation of the proposed experiment will lay the foundation for coherently coupling modulated electron beams to bound-electron transitions. Realizing it in a electron microscope, allows to exploit the nano-scopic spatial resolution of electron microscopy. Apart from new spectroscopic methods utilizing the modulated near-field of an electron beam, higher order transitions may also be excited.