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JOURNALS // Uspekhi Fizicheskikh Nauk // Archive

UFN, 2014 Volume 184, Number 7, Pages 681–722 (Mi ufn4810)

This article is cited in 33 papers

REVIEWS OF TOPICAL PROBLEMS

Ultrafast electron diffraction and electron microscopy: present status and future prospects

A. A. Ischenkoa, S. A. Aseyevb, V. N. Bagratashvilic, V. Ya. Panchenkoc, E. A. Ryabovb

a Lomonosov Moscow State University of Fine Chemical Technologies
b Institute of Spectroscopy, Russian Academy of Sciences
c Institute on Laser and Information Technologies, Russian Academy of Scienses

Abstract: Acting as complementary research tools, high time-resolved spectroscopy and diffractometry techniques proceeding from various physical principles open up new possibilities for studying matter with necessary integration of the ‘structure–dynamics–function’ triad in physics, chemistry, biology and materials science. Since the 1980s, a new field of research has started at the leading research laboratories, aimed at developing means of filming the coherent dynamics of nuclei in molecules and fast processes in biological objects (‘atomic and molecular movies’). The utilization of ultrashort laser pulse sources has significantly modified traditional electron beam approaches to and provided high space–time resolution for the study of materials. Diffraction methods using frame-by-frame filming and the development of the main principles of the study of coherent dynamics of atoms have paved the way to observing wave packet dynamics, the intermediate states of reaction centers, and the dynamics of electrons in molecules, thus allowing a transition from the kinetics to the dynamics of the phase trajectories of molecules in the investigation of chemical reactions.

PACS: 07.78.+s, 61.05.J-, 64.70.D-, 64.70.K-, 68.37.Og

Received: September 26, 2013
Revised: October 18, 2013
Accepted: October 22, 2013

DOI: 10.3367/UFNr.0184.201407a.0681


 English version:
Physics–Uspekhi, 2014, 57:7, 633–669

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