Low kinetic energy electrons are of interest for probing nanoscale dynamic processes using ultrafast electron microscopy techniques. Their low velocities reduce radiation doses and enhance the interaction with confined electromagnetic fields and, thus, may enable ultrafast spectroscopy of single nanostructures. Recent improvements in the spatial and temporal resolution of ultrafast, low-energy electron microscopy have been achieved by combining nanotip photoemitters and point-projection imaging schemes. Here, we use such an ultrafast point-projection electron microscope (UPEM) to analyze the interaction of low-energy electrons with transient electric fields created by photoemission from a nanogap antenna. By analyzing their kinetic energy distribution, we separate angular deflection due to radial field components from electron energy gain and loss due to their axial acceleration. Our measurements open up a route toward the spatial and temporal characterization of vectorial near-fields by low-energy electron streaking spectroscopy.
American Chemical Society ACS photonics Washington, DC : ACS, 2014 8(2021), 9, Seite 2573-2580 Online-Ressource
von Péter Dombi ; Zsuzsanna Pápa ; Jan Vogelsang ; Sergey V. Yalunin ; Murat Sivis ; Georg Herink ; Sascha Schäfer ; Petra Groß ; Claus Ropers ; Christoph Lienau
Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft Verhandlungen der Deutschen Physikalischen Gesellschaft Bad Honnef : DPG, 1997 Reihe 6, Bd. 52 (2017), Abstract Nr. HL 43.1, insges. 1 S.