Esta es la versión de autor del artículo publicado en: This is an author produced version of a paper published in:Science 354(6313) (2016): 734-738 DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.aah5188 Copyright: © 2016 American Association for the Advancement of ScienceEl acceso a la versión del editor puede requerir la suscripción del recurso Access to the published version may require subscription However, the rapidity of electron dynamics on the attosecond timescale has precluded their complete measurement in the time domain. Here, we demonstrate that spectrally-resolved electron interferometry reveals the amplitude and phase of a photoelectron wavepacket created through a Fano autoionizing resonance in helium. Replicas obtained by two-photon transitions interfere with reference wavepackets formed through smooth continua, allowing the full temporal reconstruction, purely from experimental data, of the resonant wavepacket released in the continuum. This in turn resolves the buildup of the autoionizing resonance on attosecond timescale. Our results, in excellent agreement with ab initio time-dependent calculations, raise prospects for both detailed investigations of ultrafast photoemission dynamics governed by electron correlation, as well as coherent control over structured electron wave-packets.One Sentence Summary: By monitoring the decay of an excited atom in real time, we reconstruct how photoelectron wavepackets are born and morph into asymmetric Fano profiles. Main Text:Tracking electronic dynamics on the attosecond (as) timescale and Ångström (Å) lengthscale is a key to understanding and controlling the quantum mechanical underpinnings of physical and chemical transformations (1). One of the most fundamental electronic processes in this context is photoelectron emission, the dynamics of which are fully encoded in the released electron wavepacket (EWP) and the final ionic state. The development of broadband coherent sources of attosecond pulses has opened the possibility of investigating these dynamics with attosecond resolution. On such a short timescale, few techniques (2-5) are able to provide access to both spectral amplitude and phase. The spectral derivative of the phase, the group delay, is a practical quantity for describing general wavepacket properties reflecting the ionization dynamics.
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