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arxiv: 2509.12015 · v2 · pith:MTJWZ6DInew · submitted 2025-09-15 · ⚛️ physics.optics · physics.app-ph· physics.ins-det· physics.plasm-ph

Probing laser-driven surface and subsurface dynamics via grazing-incidence XFEL scattering and diffraction

classification ⚛️ physics.optics physics.app-phphysics.ins-detphysics.plasm-ph
keywords grazing-incidencex-raydepth-selectivediffractiondynamicsgisaxsmeltingscattering
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We demonstrate a grazing-incidence x-ray platform that simultaneously records time-resolved grazing-incidence small-angle x-ray scattering (GISAXS) and grazing-incidence x-ray diffraction (GID) from a femtosecond laser-irradiated gold film above the melting threshold, with picosecond resolution at an x-ray free-electron laser (XFEL). By tuning the x-ray incidence angle, the probe depth is set to tens of nanometers, enabling depth-selective sensitivity to near-surface dynamics. GISAXS resolves ultrafast changes in surface nanomorphology (correlation length, roughness), while GID quantifies subsurface lattice compression, grain orientation, melting, and recrystallization. The approach overcomes photon-flux limitations of synchrotron grazing-incidence geometries and provides stringent, time-resolved benchmarks for complex theoretical models of ultrafast laser-matter interaction and warm dense matter. Looking ahead, the same depth-selective methodology is well suited to inertial confinement fusion (ICF): it can visualize buried-interface perturbations and interfacial thermal resistance on micron to sub-micron scales that affect instability seeding and burn propagation.

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