Electron-Enabled Nanoparticle Diffraction

Authored by

Stefan Nimmrichter, Dennis Rätzel, Isobel C. Bicket, Michael S. Seifner, Philipp Haslinger

Abstract

We propose a scheme for generating high-mass quantum superposition states of an optically precooled, levitated nanoparticle through electron diffraction at its subnanometer crystal lattice. When a single electron undergoes Bragg diffraction at a free-falling nanoparticle, momentum conservation implies that the superposition of Bragg momenta is imprinted onto the relative coordinate between electron and nanoparticle, which entangles their wave functions. By imaging the electron interferogram, one maps the nanoparticle state onto a superposition of Bragg momenta, as if it was diffracted by its own lattice. This results in a coherent momentum splitting approximately 1000 times greater than what is achievable with two-photon recoils in conventional standing-wave gratings. Self-interference of the nanoparticle can thus be observed within drastically shorter free-fall times in a time-domain Talbot interferometer configuration, significantly relaxing source requirements and alleviating decoherence from environmental factors such as residual gas and thermal radiation. Shorter interference times also allow for a recapture of the nanoparticle within its initial trapping volume, facilitating its reuse in many rapid experimental duty cycles. This opens new possibilities for experimental tests of macroscopic quantum effects within a transmission electron microscope.

Details

External Organisation(s)
University of Siegen
University of Bremen
TU Wien (TUW)
Type
Article
Journal
Physical review letters
Volume
135
ISSN
0031-9007
Publication date
23.10.2025
Publication status
Published
Peer reviewed
Yes
ASJC Scopus subject areas
General Physics and Astronomy
Electronic version(s)
https://doi.org/10.1103/3bvs-ymd7 (Access: Open )

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