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Lasers Emerge as a Tool for the Direct Study of Electrons in Solids

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Lasers are a powerful complement to their synchrotron-based counterparts as sources of high-energy photons for angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy.

Jake D. Koralek and D.S. Dessau, University of Colorado at Boulder

Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy is the most direct way to observe the quantum-mechanical structure of electrons in solids and one of the key tools used to understand the complex electronic interactions that lead to high-temperature superconductivity.1 In these experiments, high-energy photons eject electrons from the material of interest. Because the electron momentum is conserved in this process, the angular distribution of the ejected electrons — or photoelectrons — is representative of the initial quantum-mechanical distribution of electronic states in the solid. Using an...Read full article

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    Published: June 2006
    Basic ScienceelectronsFeaturesphotoemission spectroscopyquantum-mechanical structurespectroscopy

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