Recent advances in ultrafast electron and X-ray diffraction have pushed imaging of structural dynamics into the femtosecond time domain, that is, the fundamental time scale of atomic motion. New physics can be reached beyond the scope of traditional diffraction or reciprocal space imaging. By exploiting the high time resolution, it has been possible to directly observe the collapse of nearly innumerable possible nuclear motions to a few key reaction modes that direct chemistry. It is this reduction in dimensionality in the transition state region that makes chemistry a transferable concept, with the same class of reactions being applicable to synthetic strategies to nearly arbitrary levels of complexity. The ability to image the underlying ...
A long-held thought experiment of science is the direct observation of the motions of atoms and mole...
A long-held thought experiment of science is the direct observation of the motions of atoms and mole...
Recently ultrafast electron diffraction and microscopy have reached unprecedented temporal resolutio...
Recent advances in ultrafast electron and X-ray diffraction have pushed imaging of structural dynami...
One of the grand challenges in chemistry has been to directly observe atomic motions during chemical...
One of the grand challenges in chemistry has been to directly observe atomic motions during chemical...
The long held objective of directly observing atomic motions during the defining moments of chemistr...
One of the grand challenges in chemistry has been to directly observe atomic motions during chemical...
The long held objective of directly observing atomic motions during the defining moments of chemistr...
The long held objective of directly observing atomic motions during the defining moments of chemistr...
Time-dependent ultrafast diffraction measurements can be directly inverted to obtain the dynamics of...
55 years after Richard Feynman’s famous Caltech lecture ‘There is plenty of room at the bottom’ [1],...
55 years after Richard Feynman’s famous Caltech lecture ‘There is plenty of room at the bottom’ [1],...
55 years after Richard Feynman’s famous Caltech lecture ‘There is plenty of room at the bottom’ [1],...
55 years after Richard Feynman’s famous Caltech lecture ‘There is plenty of room at the bottom’ [1],...
A long-held thought experiment of science is the direct observation of the motions of atoms and mole...
A long-held thought experiment of science is the direct observation of the motions of atoms and mole...
Recently ultrafast electron diffraction and microscopy have reached unprecedented temporal resolutio...
Recent advances in ultrafast electron and X-ray diffraction have pushed imaging of structural dynami...
One of the grand challenges in chemistry has been to directly observe atomic motions during chemical...
One of the grand challenges in chemistry has been to directly observe atomic motions during chemical...
The long held objective of directly observing atomic motions during the defining moments of chemistr...
One of the grand challenges in chemistry has been to directly observe atomic motions during chemical...
The long held objective of directly observing atomic motions during the defining moments of chemistr...
The long held objective of directly observing atomic motions during the defining moments of chemistr...
Time-dependent ultrafast diffraction measurements can be directly inverted to obtain the dynamics of...
55 years after Richard Feynman’s famous Caltech lecture ‘There is plenty of room at the bottom’ [1],...
55 years after Richard Feynman’s famous Caltech lecture ‘There is plenty of room at the bottom’ [1],...
55 years after Richard Feynman’s famous Caltech lecture ‘There is plenty of room at the bottom’ [1],...
55 years after Richard Feynman’s famous Caltech lecture ‘There is plenty of room at the bottom’ [1],...
A long-held thought experiment of science is the direct observation of the motions of atoms and mole...
A long-held thought experiment of science is the direct observation of the motions of atoms and mole...
Recently ultrafast electron diffraction and microscopy have reached unprecedented temporal resolutio...