A new scientific instrument at the Department of Energy's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory promises to capture some of nature's speediest processes. It uses a method known as ultrafast electron ...
While taking snapshots with the high-speed electron camera at the Department of Energy's SLAC National Acceleratory Laboratory, researchers discovered new behavior in an ultrathin material that offers ...
SLAC staff scientist Alexander Reid, the first user of the lab's instrument for ultrafast electron diffraction (MeV-UED) since it became available to the international community as part of the LCLS ...
Two-dimensional electron systems form when electrons are confined to motion within an atomic‐scale layer, yielding unique collective and single‐particle phenomena distinct from their three‐dimensional ...
While taking snapshots with the high-speed “electron camera” at the Department of Energy’s SLAC National Acceleratory Laboratory, researchers discovered new behavior in an ultrathin material that ...
As reported in Nano Letters ("Giant Terahertz Birefringence in an Ultrathin Anisotropic Semimetal"), the team, led by SLAC and Stanford professor Aaron Lindenberg, found that when oriented in a ...