摘要
Microscopic electric fields govern the majority of elementary excitations in condensed matter and drive electronics at frequencies approaching the Terahertz(THz)regime.However,only few imaging schemes are able to resolve sub-wavelength fields in the THz range,such as scanning-probe techniques,electro-optic sampling,and ultrafast electron microscopy.Still,intrinsic constraints on sample geometry,acquisition speed and field strength limit their applicability.Here,we harness the quantum-confined Stark-effect to encode ultrafast electric near-fields into colloidal quantum dot luminescence.Our approach,termed Quantum-probe Field Microscopy(QFIM),combines far-field imaging of visible photons with phase-resolved sampling of electric waveforms.By capturing ultrafast movies,we spatio-temporally resolve a Terahertz resonance inside a bowtie antenna and unveil the propagation of a Terahertz waveguide excitation deeply in the sub-wavelength regime.The demonstrated QFIM approach is compatible with strong-field excitation and sub-micrometer resolution—introducing a direct route towards ultrafast field imaging of complex nanodevices inoperando.
基金
the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft(DFG,German Research Foundation)via project 403711541
T.L.acknowledges funding from the European Research Council(ERC)under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research program(grant agreement no.714968)
N.K.and P.M.thank the ARC for support through grant CE170100026.