Scientists have recorded the first ever microscopic movies of water being vaporized by the world’s brightest X-ray laser. Aside from creating a series of mesmerizing videos, the data gathered at the Department of Energy’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, in Menlo Park, California, could shed new light on X-ray lasers, and how these extremely bright, fast flashes of light take atomic-level snapshots of some of nature’s speediest processes. “It could also help us find new ways of using explosions caused by X-rays to trigger changes in samples and study matter under extreme conditions,” says Claudiu Stan of Stanford PULSE Institute, a joint institute of Stanford University and SLAC. “These studies could help us better understand a wide range of phenomena in X-ray science and other applications.” The team injected water into the path of the laser as a series of individual drops, as well as a continuous jet. As each individual X-ray pulse hit the water, a single image was recorded, timed from five billionths of a second to one ten-thousandth of a second after the pulse. These images were then strung together to create the movies. Liquids are commonly used to put scientific samples into the path of an X-ray beam for analysis. The experiments show in detail how the explosive interaction unfolds and provides clues as to how it could affect X-ray laser experiments. The study was published this week in the journal Nature Physics. Reuters
Scientists have recorded the first ever microscopic movies of water being vaporized by the world’s brightest X-ray laser.
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