Interferometry is a fundamental technique in physics, enabling precise measurements through the interference of waves. High-harmonic generation (HHG) in solids has emerged as a powerful method for probing ultrafast electronic dynamics within crystalline structures. In this study, we employed extreme ultraviolet (XUV) high-harmonic interferometry with phase-locked XUV pulse pairs to investigate excitation-induced bandgap dynamics in solids. Our experiments on amorphous SiO2 and crystalline MgO, complemented by analytical modeling and semiconductor Bloch equation simulations, reveal a correlation between phase variations in harmonic emission that are consistent with bandgap modifications. These findings suggest a potential pathway for time-resolved, all-optical probing of band structure dynamics, advancing prospects for petahertz-scale electronic applications and attosecond diagnostics of carrier dynamics.
OPG
ASML, ARCNL, VU, UvA, RUG, NWO , Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs and Climate Policy
doi.org/10.1364/optica.559022
Optica
Materials Theory and Modeling

Koll, L.-M., Vendelbo Bylling Jensen, S., van Essen, P., de Keijzer, B., Olsson, E., Cottom, J., … Jürgens, P. (2025). Extreme ultraviolet high-harmonic interferometry of excitation-induced bandgap dynamics in solids. Optica, 12(10), 1606–1614. doi:10.1364/optica.559022