The new regime of resonant nuclear photoexcitation rendered possible by x-ray free electron laser beams interacting with solid state targets is investigated theoretically. Our results unexpectedly show that secondary processes coupling nuclei to the atomic shell in the created cold high-density plasma can dominate direct photoexcitation. As an example we discuss the case of $^{93m}$Mo isomer depletion for which nuclear excitation by electron capture as secondary process is shown to be orders of magnitude more efficient than the direct laser-nucleus interaction. General arguments revisiting the role of the x-ray free electron laser in nuclear experiments involving solid-state targets are further deduced
Long-lived excited states of atomic nuclei can act as energy traps. These states, known as nuclear i...
An analysis is presented of the Coulomb excitation of low lying nuclear levels by the electrons prod...
AbstractThe resonance strength of the two-step process of nuclear excitation by electron capture fol...
The direct and secondary nuclear excitation produced by an x-ray free electron laser when interactin...
X-ray assisted nuclear excitation by electron capture (NEEC) into inner-shell atomic holes in a plas...
The optimal parameters for nuclear excitation by electron capture in plasma environments generated b...
The process of nuclear excitation by electron capture in plasma environments generated by the intera...
The direct interaction between nuclei and strong electromagnetic fields generated by novel coherent ...
The atomic nucleus and its electrons are often thought of as independent systems that are held toget...
A recent nuclear physics experiment [C. J. Chiara et al., Nature (London) 554, 216 (2018)] reports t...
Coherent population transfer between nuclear states using x-ray laser pulses is studied. The laser p...
In the course of this Thesis the mutual control between x-rays and nuclear transitions is investigat...
Long-lived excited states of atomic nuclei can act as energy traps. These states, known as nuclear i...
AbstractCoherent population transfer between nuclear states using X-ray laser pulses is studied. The...
A process for transferring energy from electron shells into nuclear excitation, NEET, has offered th...
Long-lived excited states of atomic nuclei can act as energy traps. These states, known as nuclear i...
An analysis is presented of the Coulomb excitation of low lying nuclear levels by the electrons prod...
AbstractThe resonance strength of the two-step process of nuclear excitation by electron capture fol...
The direct and secondary nuclear excitation produced by an x-ray free electron laser when interactin...
X-ray assisted nuclear excitation by electron capture (NEEC) into inner-shell atomic holes in a plas...
The optimal parameters for nuclear excitation by electron capture in plasma environments generated b...
The process of nuclear excitation by electron capture in plasma environments generated by the intera...
The direct interaction between nuclei and strong electromagnetic fields generated by novel coherent ...
The atomic nucleus and its electrons are often thought of as independent systems that are held toget...
A recent nuclear physics experiment [C. J. Chiara et al., Nature (London) 554, 216 (2018)] reports t...
Coherent population transfer between nuclear states using x-ray laser pulses is studied. The laser p...
In the course of this Thesis the mutual control between x-rays and nuclear transitions is investigat...
Long-lived excited states of atomic nuclei can act as energy traps. These states, known as nuclear i...
AbstractCoherent population transfer between nuclear states using X-ray laser pulses is studied. The...
A process for transferring energy from electron shells into nuclear excitation, NEET, has offered th...
Long-lived excited states of atomic nuclei can act as energy traps. These states, known as nuclear i...
An analysis is presented of the Coulomb excitation of low lying nuclear levels by the electrons prod...
AbstractThe resonance strength of the two-step process of nuclear excitation by electron capture fol...