Office Phone: (+30) 2810 39 4147
Lab Phone: (+30) 2810 39 4141
Email: adam@physics.uoc.gr
Full CV: Download
Publications PDF: Download
Dr. Adikimenakis Adam

Education

  • 2009, Ph.D., Physics department, University of Crete, Greece
  • 2004, M.Sc., Physics department, University of Crete, Greece
  • 2001, B.Sc., Physics department, University of Crete, Greece

Career

  • 12/2016 - today, Post Doctoral Researcher, Microelectronics Research Group (MRG), FORTH - IESL, Greece
  • 10/2015 - 11/2016, Research associate, Physics Dpt, University of Crete, Greece
  • 02/2010-09/2015, Research associate, Microelectronics Research Group (MRG), FORTH - IESL, Greece

Interests

  • III-Nitride wide band gap semiconductors
  • Molecular Beam Epitaxy growth of III-Nitrides
  • III-nitride based Heterostructures and Nanostructures for Electronic and Optoelectronic applications

Measuring the absolute carrier-envelope phase of many-cycle laser fields

The carrier-envelope phase (CEP) of high-peak-power, many-cycle laser fields becomes a crucial parameter when such fields are used, in conjunction with polarization gating techniques, in isolated attosecond (asec) pulse generation. However, its measurement has not been achieved so far.We demonstrate a physical process sensitive to the CEP value of such fields and describe a method for its online shot-to-shot monitoring. This work paves the way for the exploitation of energetic isolated asec pulses in studies of nonlinear extreme ultraviolet (XUV) processes and XUV-pump–XUV-probe experiments with asec resolutions.

P. Tzallas et al., Phys. Rev. A 82, 061401(R) (2010)

Scientific Staff

Dr. Tzallas Paraskevas
Research Director

Alumni

Prof. Charalambidis Dimitris
Professor Emeritus
Office Phone: (+30) 2810 391127
Lab Phone: (+30) 2810 391331
Email: ptzallas(AT)iesl.forth.gr
Full CV: Download
Dr. Tzallas Paraskevas
  • PERSONAL INFORMATION

Family Name, First Name : Tzallas Paraskevas

Researcher unique identifier: Paraskevas Tzallas on Google Scholar

Date of birth  : Grevena-Greece, Feb. 4, 1974.

Nationality: Hellenic

Office address : Foundation for Research and Technology - Hellas, Institute of Electronic Structure and Laser (FORTH-IESL), N. Plastira 100, Vassilika Vouton, 70013, Heraklion, Crete, Greece, Tel.: +30-81-391127, Fax: +30-81-391305, e-mail: ptzallas@iesl.forth.gr

  • CURRENT POSITION (S)

2017-now: Research Director (Researcher A')

2014-now: Senior Research fellow and Scientific Advisor at Extreme Light Infrastructure-Attosecond Light Pulse Source (ELI-ALPS), Szeged, Hungary

  • PREVIOUS POSITIONS

2002-2004: Post-Doc in MAX-PlANCK-INSTITUT FÜR QUANTENOPTIK in Garching (Germany)

2004-2017: Researcher D', Researcher C' and Principal Researcher (Researcher B') at FORTH-IESL

2018-2020: Board member of the scientific council of FORTH-IESL

  • EDUCATION: I) 1992 (Oct.)-1996(July): Diploma degree in Physics, Univ. of Ioannina-Greece; 1996 (Oct.)-2002 (Jan.) II) PhD student in AMO Phys. lab. of Department of Phys. of Univ. of Ioannina in close collaboration with Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (UK).
  • CAREER BREAKS (2004): 6 Months military obligation in the Greek Armed Forces. I was acknowledged by the Greek Ministry of National Defence as a Distinguished Scientist of Abroad.
  • RESEARCH INTERESTS: Atomic, Molecular and Optical physics (AMO); Attosecond science and strong laser field physics; Quantum Optics in Strong laser field physics
  • RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS
    • First direct observation of attosecond light bursts emitted from gas and sold state media (Nature (2003); Nature Phys. (2009); APL Photonics (2019)).
    • First observation of atomic direct double ionization by harmonic superposition (PRA  (2006)).
    • Generation of intense continuum XUV radiation by multi-cycle laser fields (Nature Phys. (2007)).
    • XUV pump-XUV probe studies of 1-fs electron dynamics (PRL (2010); Nature Phys.(2011); PRA (2014))
    • Time gated ion microscopy in the XUV spectral range (PRA (2014); Sci. Rep. (2016); J. Opt. (2018)).
    • Generation of coherent XUV pulses with the highest ever photon flux (PRA (2018), Sci. Rep. (2020)).
    • Linking quantum optics and quantum technologies with strong-laser-field physics: Generation of optical Schrodinger cat states in intense laser-matter interactions (Nature Com.(2017); PRL (2019); Nature Phys. (2021); PRL (2022); PRA (2022)).
  • PUBLICATIONS IN INTERNATIONAL REFEREED JOURNALS: 82 published papers, including 1 Nature, 4 Nature Phys., 1 Nature Comm., 7 Phys. Rev. Lett., 1 Physics Reports, 12 Phys. Rev. A, 3 Optica, 1 Opt. Lett., 5 Sci. Rep., 5 New J. Phys., 6 J. Phys. B, 2 Optics Express, 2 Appl. Phys. B, 2 Chem. Phys. Lett., 2 J. Phys. Chem. A e.t.c., 5 chapters in books, and 5 Invited review/perspective articles in international scientific journals with ≈ 3330 citations, h-factor = 32 (database: Google Scholar).
  • TALKS IN CONFERENCES/UNIVERSITIES/INSTITUTES: 2 keynote, 41 invited and 15 oral
  • REFEREE IN INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIFIC JOURNALS: 1) Nature Photon. 2) Nature Phys. 3) Nature Commun. 4) Phys. Rev. Lett. 5) Phys. Rev. A  6) Optics Letters 6) Sci. Rep. 7) New Journal of Physics  8) Optics Express 9) Journal of Physics B  10) Journal of Quantum Electronics 11) Applied Physics B.
  • PROPOSAL REVIEWER: for the Austrian Science Fund funds (FWF), German Research Foundation (DFG), Israeli Higher Education Committee/ Israeli Atomic Energy Commission (IAEC), and European Research Council, ERC Advanced Grant.
  • SUPERVISION OF GRDUATE STUDENTS AND POSTDOCTORAL FELLOWS: 4 PostDocs; 6 PhD students; 8 Master Students and 4 Diploma students.
  • PRESENT COLLABORATIONS: 1) Max Planck Institute for Quantum Optic (MPQ), Garching, Germany. 2) Institute of Carnot de Bourgogne, Dijon, France. 3) Imperial College, London, UK. 5) Dublin City University, Dublin, Ireland. 4) University Autonoma of Madrid, Madrid, Spain. 5) ICFO, Barcelona. 6) ELI-ALPS Hungary.
Office Phone: (+30) 2810 391464
Email: chara(AT)iesl.forth.gr
Prof. Charalambidis Dimitris

Education

  • 1970-1975 : Physics Dept., University of Athens/ degree of Physics, Athens / Greece
  • 1976-1980 : Physics Dept., University of Freiburg/ Diplom, Freiburg i.Br./FRG
  • 1983-1987 : Ph. D. Physics (Dok. Rer. Nat.), University of Freiburg, Freiburg i.Br. / FRG

Career

  • 1987-1992 Researcher, FORTH-IESL, Heraklio, Greece and teaching staff at the Univ. of Crete
  • 1992-1996 Assist. Prof., Physics Dept. Univ. of Crete and affiliated Univ. Prof. of FORTH-IESL
  • 1996-2003: Assoc. Prof., Physics Dept. Univ. of Crete and affiliated Univ. Prof. of FORTH-IESL
  • 2003-2020: Full Prof., Physics Dept. Univ. of Crete, affiliated Univ. Prof. of FORTH-IESL
  • 2020-today: Prof. Emeritus, Univ. of Crete and affiliated faculty member of FORTH-IESL (till 06/2024) /FORTH-IA (since 06/2024) and Chief Scientific Advisor of ELI-ALPS

Awards/Prizes/Distinctions

  • FORTH-Price for Basic Research 2000
  • CAS-LMU Fellowship 2013

Other

 

  • Member of the ERC Starting Grants Panel PE2 - Fundamental constituents of matter
  • Member of the HFRI (ELIDEK) post-doc proposals evaluation panel for Physical Sciences
  • Member of the Atomic and Molecular Physics Division (AMPD) of the EPS.
  • Board of Editors of the European Physical Journal D
  • Chief Scientific Advisor of the European Research Infrastructure (ERI) ELI-ALPS
  • Member of the Scientific Advisory Committee of the ERI ELI-ALPS
  • National delegate of the Steering  Committee of the European -XFEL
  • Member of the Scientific Advisory Committee of the European -XFEL
  • National delegate of the Analytical Research Infrastructure of ESFRI
  • Head of the attosecond S&T laboratory of FORTH-IESL
  • Director of the postgraduate program on Micro- and Opto-electronics, Physics Dept., Univ. of Crete.
  • Chair of the Sectorial Scientific Council (TES) for Physical Sciences
  • Member of the HFRI (ELIDEK) Advisory Committee

Research Group Overview: Mission, research focus, main scientific directions

In this direction the research mainly focuses on the generation, characterization and applications of intense coherent extreme-ultraviolet (XUV) radiation emitted in the form of pulses of duration less than 1fs (attosecond pulses) [Nature 426, 267 (2003); Nature Phys. 3, 846 (2007); Nature Phys. 7, 781 (2011); APL Photonics 4, 080901 (2019); Photonics, 4, 26, (2017)]. It targets the development, upgrades and running of a state of the art, table top, attosecond facility dedicated to the investigation of ultrafast dynamics in all states of matter, as well as of non-linear and strong field phenomena induced solely by the XUV radiation. Other activities include, the generation of high photon flux circularly polarized XUV pulses for investigating ultrafast chiral phenomena in the XUV spectral region, the development of high spatial resolution ion imaging techniques for single-shot high resolution time delay spectroscopy in the XUV, electron-ion coincidence studies in strong field laser-atom interactions, adaptive quantum control through feedback optimized pulse shaping and the development of quantitative methods in strong field interactions.

 

 

Research Topics

Direction #A: Attosecond Science

Specifically, the research mainly focuses on the generation, characterization and applications of intense coherent extreme-ultraviolet (XUV) radiation emitted in the form of pulses of duration less than 1fs (attosecond pulses). It targets the development, upgrades and running of a state of the art, table top, attosecond facility dedicated to the investigation of ultrafast dynamics in all states of matter, as well as of non-linear and strong field phenomena induced solely by the EUV radiation. Other activities include electron-ion coincidence studies in strong field laser-atom interactions, adaptive quantum control through feedback optimized pulse shaping and the development of quantitative methods in strong field interactions.

Contributions to the above research topic encompass (chronologically listed):

I) the development of a large number of novel devices and techniques such as 1) the dispersionless Michelson interferometer for the characterization of attosecond pulse, (Appl. Phys. B 74, 197 (2002); Opt. Lett. 27, 1561 (2002)), 2) the dispersionless non-linear XUV autocorrelator (Nature 426, 267 (2003)), 3) phase control techniques for he characterization of attosecond pulses (Phys. Rev. A 64, 1, 051801 (R) (2001); Phys. Rev. Lett. 96, 163901 (2006); New J. Phys. 9, 232, (2007)),  4) an inteferometric polarization gating device for the generation of intense isolated attosecond pulses by multi-cycle high power laser pulses (Nature Phys. 3, 846 (2007)), 5) a carrier-envelope-phase (CEP) meter for multi-cycle laser pulses (Phys. Rev. A 82, 061401 (2010)), and the use of an Ion Microscope detector for quantitative studies in the linear and non-linear XUV regime (Phys. Rev. A 90, 013822 (2014); Sci. Rep. 6, 21556 (2016)).

II) highlights such as 1) the first indication of experimental attosecond localization  (Phys. Rev. Lett. 83, 4289 (1999)), 2) the first electron-ion coincidence measurements in the strong field interaction region (Phys. Rev. Lett. 85, 2268 (2000)), 3) the first  two XUV-photon ionization be a comp of higher harmonics Phys. Rev. Lett. 90, 133902 (2003), 4) adaptive quantum control of vibrational ionization branching ratios through feedback - optimized fs pulse shaping (J. Chem. Phys. 118, 595 (2003)), 5) the direct observation of attosecond light bursts emitted from gas and solid state media (Nature 426, 267 (2003); Nature Phys. 5, 124 (2009)), 6) the generation of intense coherent continuum XUV radiation generated by multi-cycle high-power laser fields (Nature Phys. 3, 846 (2007)), 7) the observation of atomic direct double ionization by a harmonic superposition (Phys. Rev. A 74, 051402(R) (2006)), 8) the tracking of the autoionizing-wavepacket dynamics and molecular dynamics at 1-fs temporal scale (Phys. Rev. Lett. 105, 043902 (2010); Nature Phys. 7, 781 (2011); Phys. Rev. A 89, 023420 (2014)), 9) the measurement of the electron quantum path details of the recollision process (Phys. Rev. A 90, 013822 (2014)) and the quantitative measurement of the single- and the two-XUV-photon ionization cross-section of Helium in the 20eV photon energy range (Sci. Rep. 6, 21556 (2016)).

The latest technological advancement towards a table top high XUV-photon-flux attosecond pulse source is the newly constructed ≈ 18 m long 20 GWatt XUV (HHG) beam line [9]. The beam line provides the highest ever XUV pulse energy (≈ 230 µJ per pulse) in the spectral region 20-30eV. The corresponding photon flux of 0.6 ´ 10^14 photons/pulse is competitive to FEL photon fluxes in this spectral region. Using these pulses a focused intensity of ~7 ´ 10^15 W/cm2 has been achieved (a value that by using high reflectivity XUV optics can be increased to 10^17 W/cm2) and multiply charged Argon atoms (Ar^4+) have been produced by multi-XUV-photon ionization processes (Phys. Rev. A 98, 023426 (2018)).

The long-standing scientific quest of real-time tracing electronic motion and dynamics in all states of matter has been remarkably benefited by the development of intense pulsed laser sources with a temporal resolution in the attosecond (1 attosecond (asec) = 10^-18 sec) time scale. In the last 15 years we have systematically developed the means for the generation of high photon flux extreme ultraviolet (XUV) pulses with 1fs to sub-fs pulse duration, making use of the process of higher order harmonic generation (HOHG). Utilizing multi-cycle laser pulses delivered by high peak Ti:S laser systems, in combination with Polarization Gating techniques [1], XUV pulse intensities up to 10^14 W/cm2 have been reached in the spectral region 10-24 eV. These pulses have been exploited in I) the temporal characterization of attosecond pulses [2-4]; II) the first proof of principle XUV-pump-XUV-probe experiments for the study of 1fs scale electron dynamics in atoms/molecules [5, 6], and III)  quantitative studies of linear and non-linear ionization processes in XUV regime [7,8].

The latest technological advance towards an XUV high photon flux attosecond pulsed source is the newly constructed ≈ 18 m long (HHG) 20 GWatt XUV beam line [9]. The beam line beam line provides the highest ever XUV pulse energy (≈ 230 µJ per pulse) in the spectral region 20-30eV. The corresponding photon flux of 0.6 X 10^14 photons/pulse is competitive with FEL photon fluxes in this spectral region. Using these pulses a focused intensity of ~7 X 10^15 W/cm^2 has been achieved (a value that by using high reflectivity XUV optics can be increased to 10^17 W/cm^2) and multiply charged Argon atoms (Ar^4+) have been produced by multi-XUV-photon ionization processes.

[1] P. Tzallas et al. Nature Physics 3, 846 (2007)

[2] P. Tzallas et al. Nature 426, 267 (2003)

[3] L. A. A. Nikolopoulos Phys. Rev. Lett.. 94, 113905 (2005)

[4] Y. Nomura et al. Nature Physics 5, 124 - 128 (2009)

[5] P. Tzallas et al. Nature Physics 7, 781 (2011)

[6] P. A. Carpeggiani,  et al.  Phys. Rev. A 89, 023420 (2014)

[7] N. Tsatrafyllis, et al., Sci. Rep. 6(1), 21556 (2016).

[8] P. Tzallas, et al., J. Opt. 20(2), 024018 (2018).

[9] A. Nayak et al., Phys. Rev. A 98, 023426 (2018)

Coherent broadband XUV radiation has been extensively used over the last decades for tracing ultrafast dynamics and performing time delay spectroscopic studies of systems of the microcosm. The majority of these studies were performed using XUV-XUV or XUV-IR pump-probe schemes involving interferometers (or wave front beam splitters) for introducing a delay between the pump and the probe pulses. However, these schemes suffer from the intrinsic limitations that accompany any pump-probe arrangement. In a pump-probe experiment the evolution of the system is obtained by multiple measurements at different time delays introduced between the pump-probe pulses during which all the experimental parameters must remain constant. Additionally, a pump-probe measurement with asec resolution suffers from spectroscopic limitations due to difficulties on maintaining the experimental parameters constant for long data acquisition times and long delays between the pump-probe pulses.

The aim of the research is to overcome these obstacles and develop an approach which provides "high" temporal (sub-fs) and spectral resolution (meV)  in a single-shot measurement. This will be achieved by means of time gated ion microscopy approach [1] where an Ion Microscope with spatial resolution in the range of ≈ 1 μm will be used to record the ion distribution produced a 2-XUV-photon ionization process at the focus of two counter propagated XUV pulses. Towards this direction we will use the 20-Gwatt XUV beam line that we have recently developed at FORTH.

[1] P. Tzallas, et al., J. Opt. 20, 024018 (2018).

Strong-field effects induced in the extreme ultraviolet domain
I. Makos, I. Orfanos, E. Skantzakis, I. Liontos, P. Tzallas, A. Forembski, L. A. A. Nikolopoulos, and D. Charalambidis
High Power Laser Science and Engineering, Volume:8, Page:e44, Year:2020, DOI:doi.org/10.1017/hpl.2020.43
Non-linear processes in the extreme ultraviolet
I. Orfanos, I. Makos, I. Liontos, E. Skantzakis, B. Major, A. Nayak, M. Dumergue, S. Kühn, S. Kahaly, K. Varju, G. Sansone, B. Witzel, C. Kalpouzos, L. A. A. Nikolopoulos, P. Tzallas and D. Charalambidis
J. Phys. Photonics, Volume:2, Page:042003, Year:2020, DOI:doi.org/10.1088/2515-7647/aba172
Saddle point approaches in strong field physics and generation of attosecond pulses
A. Nayak, M. Dumergue, S. Kühn, S. Mondal, T. Csizmadia, N.G. Harshitha, M. Füle, M. U. Kahaly, B. Farkas, B. Major, V. Szaszkó-Bogár, P. Földi, S. Majorosi, N. Tsatrafyllis, E. Skantzakis, L. Neoričić, M. Shirozhan, G. Vampa, K. Varjú, P. Tzallas, G. Sansone, D. Charalambidis and S. Kahaly
Physics Reports, Volume:833, Page:1, Year:2020, DOI:doi.org/10.1016/j.physrep.2019.10.002
Carrier-envelope-phase measurement of few-cycle mid-infrared laser pulses using high harmonic generation in ZnO
R. Hollinger, D. Hoff, P. Wustelt, S. Skruszewicz, Y. Zhang, H. Kang, D. Würzler, T. Jungnickel, M. Dumergue, A. Nayak, R. Flender, L. Haizer, M. Kurucz, B. Kiss, S. Kühn, E. Cormier, C. Spielmann, G. G. Paulus, P. Tzallas, and M. Kübel
Optics Express, Volume:28, Page:7314, Year:2020, DOI:doi.org/10.1364/OE.383484
A 10-gigawatt attosecond source for non-linear XUV optics and XUV-pump-XUV-probe studies
I. Makos, I. Orfanos, A. Nayak, J. Peschel, B. Major, I. Liontos, E. Skantzakis, N. Papadakis, C. Kalpouzos, M. Dumergue, S. Kühn, K. Varju, P. Johnsson , A. L’Huillier, P. Tzallas & D. Charalambidis
Sci. Rep., Volume:10, Page:3759, Year:2020, DOI:doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-60331-9
Attosecond pulse metrology
I. Orfanos, I. Makos, I. Liontos, E. Skantzakis, B. Förg, D. Charalambidis, and P. Tzallas
APL Photonics, Volume:4, Page:080901, Year:2019, DOI:doi.org/10.1063/1.5086773
Quantum path interferences in high-order harmonic generation from aligned diatomic molecules
S. Chatziathanasiou, I. Liontos, E. Skantzakis, S. Kahaly, M. Upadhyay Kahaly, N. Tsatrafyllis, O. Faucher, B. Witzel, N. Papadakis, D. Charalambidis, and P. Tzallas
Phys. Rev. A, Volume:100, Page:061404(R), Year:2019, DOI:doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.100.061404
Imaging the source of high-harmonics generated in atomic gas media
S. Chatziathanasiou, S. Kahaly, D. Charalambidis, P. Tzallas, and E. Skantzakis
Optics Express, Volume:27, Page:9733, Year:2019, DOI:doi.org/10.1364/OE.27.009733
Towards intense isolated attosecond pulses from relativistic surface high harmonics
O. Jahn, V. E. Leshchenko, P. Tzallas, A. Kessel, M. Krüger, A. Münzer, S. A. Trushin, G. D. Tsakiris, S. Kahaly, D. Kormin, L. Veisz, V. Pervak, F. Krausz, Zs. Major, and S. Karsch
Optica, Volume:6, Page:280, Year:2019, DOI:doi.org/10.1364/OPTICA.6.000280
Propagation-enhanced generation of intense high-harmonic continua in the 100-eV spectral region
D. E. Rivas, B. Major, M. Weidman, W. Helml, G. Marcus, R. Kienberger, D. Charalambidis, P. Tzallas, E. Balogh, K. Kovács, V. Tosa, B. Bergues, K. Varjú, and L. Veisz,
Optica , Volume:5, Page:1283, Year:2018, DOI:doi.org/10.1364/OPTICA.5.001283
Multiple ionization of Argon via multi-XUV photon absorption induced by 20-GW high-order harmonic laser pulses
A. Nayak, I. Orfanos, I. Makos, M. Dumergue, S. Kühn, E. Skantzakis, B. Bodi, K. Varju, C. Kalpouzos, H. I. B. Banks, A. Emmanouilidou, D. Charalambidis, and P. Tzallas
Phys.Rev.A, Volume:98, Page:023426, Year:2018, DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.98.023426
Tabletop nonlinear optics in the 100-eV spectral region
B. Bergues, D. E. Rivas, M. Weidman, A. A. Muschet, W. Helml, A. Guggenmos, V. Pervak, U. Kleineberg, G. Marcus, R. Kienberger, D. Charalambidis, P. Tzallas, H. Schröder, F. Krausz, and L. Veisz,
Optica, Volume:5, Page:237-242, Year:2018, DOI:doi.org/10.1364/OPTICA.5.000237
Time gated ion microscopy of light-atom interactions
P. Tzallas, B. Bergues, D. Rompotis, N. Tsatrafyllis, S. Chatziathanasiou, A. Muschet, L. Veisz, H. Schröder and D. Charalambidis
J. Opt, Volume:20 , Page:024018, Year:2018 , DOI:doi.org/10.1088/2040-8986/aaa326
Next Generation Driver for Attosecond and Laser-plasma Physics
D. E. Rivas, A. Borot, D. E. Cardenas, G. Marcus, X. Gu, D. Herrmann, J. Xu, J. Tan, D. Kormin, G. Ma, W. Dallari, G. D. Tsakiris, I. B. Földes, S.-w. Chou, M. Weidman, B. Bergues, T. Wittmann, H. Schröder, P. Tzallas, D. Charalambidis, O. Razskazovskaya, V. Pervak, F. Krausz and L. Veisz
Scientific Reports, Volume:7, Page:5224 , Year:2017, DOI:doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-05082-w
The ELI-ALPS facility: the next generation of attosecond sources
Sergei Kühn, Mathieu Dumergue, Subhendu Kahaly, Sudipta Mondal, Miklós Füle, Tamás Csizmadia, Balázs Farkas, Balázs Major, Zoltán Várallyay, Eric Cormier, Mikhail Kalashnikov, Francesca Calegari, Michele Devetta, Fabio Frassetto, Erik Månsson, Luca Poletto, Salvatore Stagira, Caterina Vozzi, Mauro Nisoli, Piotr Rudawski, Sylvain Maclot, Filippo Campi, Hampus Wikmark, Cord L Arnold, Christoph M Heyl, Per Johnsson, Anne L'Huillier, Rodrigo Lopez-Martens, Stefan Haessler, Maïmona Bocoum, Frederik Boehle, Aline Vernier, Gregory Iaquaniello, Emmanuel Skantzakis, Nikos Papadakis, Constantinos Kalpouzos, Paraskevas Tzallas, Franck Lépine, Dimitris Charalambidis, Katalin Varjú, Károly Osvay and Giuseppe Sansone
J. Phys. B: At. Mol. Opt. Phys, Volume:50, Page:132002, Year:2017, DOI:doi.org/10.1088/1361-6455/aa6ee8
Generation of Attosecond Light Pulses from Gas and Solid State Media
Stefanos. Chatziathanasiou, Subhendu. Kahaly, Emmanouil. Skantzakis, Giuseppe. Sansone , Rodrigo. Lopez-Martens, Stefan. Haessler, Katalin. Varju , George. D. Tsakiris, Dimitris. Charalambidis and Paraskevas. Tzallas,
Photonics, Volume:4, Issue:2, Page:26, Year:2017, DOI:10.3390/photonics4020026
Polarization shaping of high-order harmonics in laser-aligned molecules
E. Skantzakis, S. Chatziathanasiou, P. A. Carpeggiani, G. Sansone, A. Nayak, D. Gray, P. Tzallas, D. Charalambidis, E. Hertz & O. Faucher,
Scientific Reports, Volume:6, Page:39295, Year:2016, DOI:10.1038/srep39295
The ion microscope as a tool for quantitative measurements in the extreme ultraviolet
N. Tsatrafyllis, B. Bergues, H. Schröder, L. Veisz, E. Skantzakis, D. Gray, B. Bodi, S. Kuhn, G. D. Tsakiris, D. Charalambidis & P. Tzallas
Sci Rep. , Volume:6, Page:21556, Year:2016, DOI:10.1038/srep21556
Advantages in high-order harmonic generation sources for time resolved investigations
Reduzzi, M., Carpeggiani, P., Kühn, S., Calegari, F., Nisoli, M., Stagira, S., Vozzi, C., Dombi, P., Kahaly, S., Tzallas, P., Charalambidis, D., Varju, K., Osvay, K., Sansone, G.
J. El. Spec. Rel. Phen. , Volume:204, Page:257 , Year:2015, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.elspec.2015.09.002
Chiral Cavity Ring Down Polarimetry: Chirality and magnitometry measurements using signal reversals
L. Bougas, D. Sofikitis, G. E. Katsoprinakis, A. K. Spiliotis. P. Tzallas, B. Loppinet, and T. P. Rakitzis
J. Phys. Chem. , Volume:143, Page:104202, Year:2015, DOI:https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4930109
Single shot autocorrelator for extreme-ultraviolet radiation
G. Kolliopoulos, P. Tzallas, B. Buerges, P. A. Carpeggiani, P. Heissler, H. Schroder, L. Veisz, D. Charalambidis and G. D. Tsakiris
J. Opt. Soc. Am. A, Volume:31, Page:926, Year:2014, DOI:10.1364/JOSAB.31.000926
Revealing Quantum path details in high-field physics
G. Kolliopoulos, B. Bergues, H. Schroder, P. A. Carpeggiani, G. D. Tsakiris, D. Charalambidis and P. Tzallas
Phys. Rev. A, Volume:90, Page:013822, Year:2014, DOI:10.1103/PhysRevA.90.013822
Disclosing one-femtosecond scale intrinsic molecular dynamics through extreme-ultraviolet pump-probe measurements
P. A. Carpeggiani, P. Tzallas, A. Palacios, D. Gray, F. Martín and D. Charalambidis
Phys.Rev.A, Volume:89, Page:023420, Year:2014, DOI:dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.89.023420
A compact collinear polarization gating scheme for many cycle laser pulses
G. Kolliopoulos, P. A. Carpeggiani, D. Rompotis, D. Charalambidis and P. Tzallas
Rev. Sci. Instrum., Volume:83, Issue:6, Page:063102, Year:2012, DOI:10.1063/1.4725590
Two-photon above-threshold ionization using extreme-ultraviolet harmonic emission from relativistic laser–plasma interaction
P. Heissler, P. Tzallas, J. M. Mikhailova, K. Khrennikov, L. Waldecker, F. Krausz, S. Karsch, D. Charalambidis, G. D. Tsakiris
New J Phys, Volume:14, Page:043025, Year:2012, DOI:10.1088/1367-2630/14/4/043025
Few-Cycle Driven Relativistically Oscillating Plasma Mirrors: A Source of Intense Isolated Attosecond Pulses
P. Heissler, R. Horlein, J. M. Mikhailova, L. Waldecker, P. Tzallas, A. Buck, K. Schmid, C. M. S. Sears, F. Krausz, L. Veisz, M. Zepf and G. D. Tsakiris,
Phys. Rev. Letter, Volume:108, Page:235003, Year:2012, DOI:10.1103/PhysRevLett.108.235003
Direct two-XUV-photon double ionization in xenon
P. Tzallas, E. Skantzakis, D. Charalambidis
J. Phys. B, Volume:45, Page:074007, Year:2012, DOI:10.1088/0953-4075/45/7/074007
Extreme-ultraviolet pump-probe studies of one femtosecond scale electron dynamics
P. Tzallas, E. Skantzakis, L.A.A. Nikolopoulos, G. D. Tsakiris, D. Charalambidis
Nat. Phys., Volume:7, Page:781–784, Year:2011, DOI:10.1038/nphys2033
Measuring the absolute carrier-envelope phase of many-cycle laser fields
P. Tzallas, E. Skantzakis, D. Charalambidis
Phys. Rev. A, Volume:82, Page:061401R, Year:2010, DOI:10.1103/PhysRevA.82.061401
Persistent quantum interfering electron trajectories
J. E. Kruse, P. Tzallas, E. Skantzakis, and D. Charalambidis
Phys. Rev. A, Volume:82, Page:033438, Year:2010, DOI:10.1103/PhysRevA.82.033438
Inconsistencies between two attosecond pulse metrology methods: A comparative study
J. E. Kruse, P. Tzallas, E. Skantzakis, C. Kalpouzos, G. D. Tsakiris, D. Charalambidis
Phys. Rev. A, Volume:82, Page:021402(R), Year:2010, DOI:10.1103/PhysRevA.82.021402
Tracking autoionizing-wavepacket dynamics at 1-femtosecond temporal scale
E. Skantzakis, P. Tzallas, J. E. Kruse, C. Kalpouzos, O. Faucher, G. D. Tsakiris and D. Charalambidis,
Phys. Rev. Lett. , Volume:105, Page:043902, Year:2010, DOI:10.1103/PhysRevLett.105.043902
Temporal characterization of attosecond pulses emitted from solid-density plasmas
R. Horlein, Y. Nomura, P. Tzallas, S. G. Rykovanov, B. Dromey, J. Osterhoff, Zs Major, S. Karsch, L. Veisz, M. Zepf, D. Charalambidis, F. Krausz, G. Tsakiris,
New J Phys, Volume:12, Page:043020, Year:2010, DOI:10.1088/1367-2630/12/4/043020
Realization of time resolved two-VUV-photon ionization
A. Peralta Conde, J. Kruse, O. Faucher, P. Tzallas, E. P. Benis and D. Charalambidis
Phys. Rev. A, Volume:79, Page:061405R, Year:2009, DOI:10.1103/PhysRevA.79.06140
Four-dimensional investigation of the 2nd order volume autocorrelation technique
O. Faucher,A. P. Tzallas, E. P. Benis, Peralta Conde, J. Kruse, and D. Charalambidis,
Appl. Phys. B, Volume:97, Issue:505, Year:2009, DOI:10.1007/s00340-009-3559-z
Coherent continuum XUV radiation in the sub-100 nJ range generated by a high power many-cycle laser field
E. Skantzakis, P. Tzallas, J. Kruse, G. Maravelias, C. Kalpouzos and D. Charalambidis
Opt Lett., Volume:34, Issue:11, Page:1732, Year:2009, DOI:10.1364/OL.34.001732
On the population dynamics induced by an attosecond train interacting coherently with an atomic system within the electric dipole approximation
A. Peralta Conde, P. Tzallas and D. Charalambidis
Eur. Phys. J. D, Volume:51, Page:289, Year:2009, DOI:10.1140/epjd/e2009-00018-8
Attosecond phase locking of harmonics emitted from laser-produced plasmas
Y. Nomura, R. Hoerlein, P. Tzallas, B. Dromey, S. Rykovanov, Zs. Major, J. Osterhoff, S. Karsch, L. Veisz, M. Zepf, D. Charalambidis, F. Krausz and G. D. Tsakiris
Nat. Phys., Volume:5, Page:124, Year:2009, DOI:10.1038/nphys1155
Exploring intense attosecond pulses
D. Charalambidis, P. Tzallas, E. P. Benis, E. Skantzakis, G. Maravelias, L. A. A. Nikolopoulos, A. P. Conde, and G. D. Tsakiris,
New J Phys, Volume:10, Page:025018, Year:2008, DOI:10.1088/1367-2630/10/2/025018
Laser-induced field-free alignment of the OCS molecule
V. Loriot, P. Tzallas, E. P. Benis, E. Hertz, B. Lavorel, D. Charalambidis, and O. Faucher,
J. Phys. B, Volume:40, Page:2503, Year:2007, DOI:10.1088/0953-4075/40/12/023
Generation of intense continuum extreme-ultraviolet radiation by many-cycle laser fields
P. Tzallas, E. Skantzakis, C. Kalpouzos, E.P. Benis, G.D. Tsakiris and D. Charalambidis,
Nature Phys., Volume:3, Page:846–850, Year:2007, DOI:10.1038/nphys747
Full temporal reconstruction of a lower order harmonic superposition
P. Tzallas, E. Skantzakis, E.P. Benis, C. Kalpouzos, G.D. Tsakiris, and D. Charalambidis,
New J Phys, Volume:9, Page:232, Year:2007, DOI:10.1088/1367-2630/9/7/232
Two-photon double ionization of rare gases by a superposition of harmonics
E.P. Benis, D. Charalambidis, T.N. Kitsopoulos, G.D. Tsakiris, and P. Tzallas,
Phys. Rev. A, Volume:74, Page:051402, Year:2006, DOI:10.1103/PhysRevA.74.051402
Comment on "Photoionization of helium atoms irradiated with intense vacuum ultraviolet free-electron laser light. Part I. Experimental study of multiphoton and single-photon processes"
Dimitrios Charalambidis, P. Tzallas, N. A. Papadogiannis, L. A. A. Nikolopoulos, E. P. Benis, and G. D. Tsakiris
Phys. Rev. A, Volume:74, Page:037401 , Year:2006, DOI:10.1103/PhysRevA.74.037401
Frequency-resolved photoelectron spectra of two-photon ionization of He by an attosecond pulse train
E.P. Benis, P. Tzallas, L.A.A. Nikolopoulos, M. Kovacev, C. Kalpouzos, D. Charalambidis, and G. Tsakiris
New J Phys, Volume:8, Page:92, Year:2006, DOI:10.1088/1367-2630/8/6/092
Spectral phase distribution retrieval through coherent control of harmonic generation
E. Papalazarou, M. Kovacev, P. Tzallas, E.P. Benis, C. Kalpouzos, G.D. Tsakiris and D. Charalambidis,
Phys. Rev. Lett. , Volume:96, Issue:16, Page:163901, Year:2006, DOI:10.1103/PhysRevLett.96.163901
The attosecond-science frontiers: generation, metrology and path of applications
P. Tzallas, G. D. Tsakiris, K. Witte, L. A. A. Nikolopoulos, E. P. Benis, D. Charalambidis
J. Elect. Spec. Rel. Phenomena, Volume:144, Page:1129, Year:2005, DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.elspec.2005.01.267
Attosecond pulse trains: generation, metrology and application perspectives
P. Tzallas, G. D. Tsakiris, K. Witte, L. A. A. Nikolopoulos, E. P. Benis, D. Charalambidis
Laser Physics, Volume:15, Issue:6, Page:821, Year:2005, DOI:NA
Second order autocorrelation of an XUV attosecond pulse train
L.A.A. Nikolopoulos, E.P. Benis, P. Tzallas, D. Charalambidis, K. Witte and G.D. Tsakiris,
Phys Rev Lett. , Volume:94, Issue:11, Page:113905, Year:2005, DOI:10.1103/PhysRevLett.94.113905
Second-order autocorrelation measurements of attosecond XUV pulse trains
P. Tzallas, D. Charalambidis, N.A. Papadogiannis, K. Witte, and G.D. Tsakiris,
J. Mod. Opt., Volume:52, Issue:2-3, Page:321, Year:2005, DOI:10.1080/09500340412331301533
Extending optical fs metrology to XUV attosecond pulses
P. Tzallas, K. Witte, G.D. Tsakiris, N.A. Papadogiannis, and D. Charalambidis,
Appl. Phys. A, Volume:79, Page:1673, Year:2004, DOI:10.1007/s00339-004-2680-4
Direct observation of attosecond light bunching
P. Tzallas, D. Charalambidis, N.A. Papadogiannis, K. Witte, and G. D. Tsakiris
Nature, Volume:426, Page:267–271, Year:2003, DOI:10.1038/nature02091
On the feasibility of performing non-linear autocorrelation with attosecond pulse trains
N.A. Papadogiannis, L.A.A. Nikolopoulos, D. Charalambidis, G. D. Tsakiris, P. Tzallas, and K. Witte,
Appl. Phys. B, Volume:46, Page:721, Year:2003, DOI:10.1007/s00340-003-1179-6
Recent developments in attosecond pulse train metrology
D. Charalambidis, N.A. Papadogiannis, P. Tzallas, G.D. Tsakiris, and K. Witte
Phys. Scr., Volume:2003, Page:23-26, Year:2003, DOI:10.1238/Physica.Topical.105a00023
Two-Photon Ionization of He through a Superposition of Higher Harmonics.
Papadogiannis NA1, Nikolopoulos LA, Charalambidis D, Tsakiris GD, Tzallas P, Witte K.
Phys. Rev. Letter, Volume:90, Issue:13, Page:133902, Year:2003, DOI:10.1103/PhysRevLett.90.133902
Attosecond scale multi-XUV-photon processes
D. Charalambidis, P. Tzallas, E. P. Benis, G. D. Tsakiris,
Year: 2009, ISBN:978-3-540-69142-6

Heads

Dr. Tzallas Paraskevas
Research Director

Research Associates

Dr. Skantzakis Manolis
PostDoctoral Fellow

Students

Mr. Vassakis Emmanouil ( Manos )
Ph.D. student

Alumni

Dr. Chatziathanasiou Stefanos
PostDoctoral Fellow
Dr. Kalpouzos Constantinos
Senior application Scientist
Dr. Liontos Ioannis
PostDoctoral Fellow
Mr. Makos Ioannis
Ph.D. student
Dr. Orfanos Ioannis
PostDoctoral Fellow
Dr. Papadakis Nikolaos
Technician
Prof. Charalambidis Dimitris
Professor Emeritus

Infrastructure Equipment

A double-stage operation Ti:S laser system of FORTH-IESL delivering I) 10Hz rep. rate, IR laser pulses of 20 fs duration and energy up to 350mJ/pulse and II) at 1kHz rep. rate, IR laser pulses of 35 fs duration and energy up to 3mJ/pulse

A newly constructed ≈ 18 m long 20-GWatt coherent XUV (HHG) beam line [Phys. Rev. A 98, 023426 (2018); Sci. Reports 10, 3759 (2020)] driven by the high power Ti:S laser system. The beam line provides asec/fs XUV pulses with the highest ever pulse energy (≈ 230 µJ per pulse) corresponding photon flux of 6 x 10^13 photons/pulse in the spectral region 17-33eV.

A 10 m long 100 MWatt coherent XUV beam line [Nature Phys. 7, 781 (2011)] driven by the high power Ti:S laser system. The beam line provides asec/fs XUV pulses with energy up to 1 μJ/pulse with corresponding flux 2x10^11 photons/pulse in the spectral range of 17-33 eV.

SOFT MATTER

Soft Matter Science is a highly interdisciplinary field comprising fundamental Physics, challenging Chemistry and a wide range of applications related with Materials and Chemical Engineering as well as Biology and Bioengineering.

The research groups of IESL’s Soft Matter Division have established FORTH’s position as an international pillar in soft matter research, by working at the forefront of these topics, utilizing a variety of experimental and synthetic techniques and collaborating with world class academic and industrial partners around the globe.

APPLIED PHOTONICS & LIGHT-MATTER INTERACTIONS

The Applied Photonics & Light-Matter Interactions Division covers a wide range of activities relative to modern light science and its application in the research of the properties of novel materials using advanced spectroscopic and imaging methods. 

The Photonic Materials and Devices Laboratory  focuses on the research of materials, light propagation effects, designs, and fabrication methods for the development of Photonic Devices, with emphasis in optical fiber sensors, resonators, and microstructured optical fiber devices.  Nonlinear Lithography utilizes the nonlinear optical response of materials to achieve high-resolution 3D patterning beyond the diffraction limit. Ultra-fast Laser Micro- and Nano-Processing employs ultra-fast lasers for precise and rapid material modification at the micro- and nano- scales. Diagnostic Methodologies and Instrumentation comprises of activities in ultrafast and nonlinear interactions of light with bulk and nanostructured materials, analytical spectroscopy and instrumentation for the analysis of solids and liquids, opto-sensing research in photophysics/chemistry involving micro/nanostructured materials. Photonics for Heritage Science applies photonics technologies  such as imaging, laser spectroscopy and ablation, to study and preserve cultural heritage objects and Monuments. Biophotonics  is focused on developing key enabling technologies for microscopic, mesoscopic and macroscopic imaging and tissue engineering and their application for biological and medical studies.

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