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Watching What Happens During Attoseconds in Solids

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Understanding attosecond-scale phenomena may enable electronics 100,000 times faster than today’s devices.

Reinhard Kienberger, Max Planck Institut für Quantenoptik

New insight into ever-smaller structures of matter and their ever-faster dynamics holds great promise for pushing the frontiers of many fields in science and technology. The speed of electronic processes is determined by the separation of the energetic states of electrons. In atoms, the binding energy of electrons is on the order of tens to hundreds of electron volts, which explains why electronic processes occur on an attosecond timescale. One attosecond (10–18 s) is the billionth part of a nanosecond, which is itself the billionth part of a second. Put more picturesquely, one attosecond...Read full article

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    Published: April 2008
    Basic ScienceCommunicationselectron voltselectronsFeaturesindustrialpulseSensors & Detectors

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