Abstract

The interaction between super-intense coherent x-ray light and nuclei is studied theoretically. One of the main difficulties in driving nuclear transitions arises from the very narrow nuclear excited state widths, which limit the coupling between lasers and nuclei. In the context of direct laser–nucleus interaction, we consider the nuclear width broadening that occurs when in solid targets, when the excitation caused by a single photon is shared by a large number of nuclei, forming a collective excited state. Our results show that cooperative effects mostly contribute with a modest increase to the nuclear excited state population except in the case of 57Fe, where the enhancement can reach almost two orders of magnitude. Additionally, an update is given of previous estimates of the nuclear excited state population and signal photons for x-ray lasers interacting with solid-state and ion beam nuclear targets taking into account the experimental advances of x-ray coherent light sources. The presented values are an improvement by orders of magnitude and are encouraging as to the future prospects of nuclear quantum optics.

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