- Popmintchev, Dimitar;
- Galloway, Benjamin R;
- Chen, Ming-Chang;
- Dollar, Franklin;
- Mancuso, Christopher A;
- Hankla, Amelia;
- Miaja-Avila, Luis;
- O'Neil, Galen;
- Shaw, Justin M;
- Fan, Guangyu;
- Ališauskas, Skirmantas;
- Andriukaitis, Giedrius;
- Balčiunas, Tadas;
- Mücke, Oliver D;
- Pugzlys, Audrius;
- Baltuška, Andrius;
- Kapteyn, Henry C;
- Popmintchev, Tenio;
- Murnane, Margaret M
Recent advances in high-order harmonic generation have made it possible to use a tabletop-scale setup to produce spatially and temporally coherent beams of light with bandwidth spanning 12 octaves, from the ultraviolet up to x-ray photon energies >1.6 keV. Here we demonstrate the use of this light for x-ray-absorption spectroscopy at the K- and L-absorption edges of solids at photon energies near 1 keV. We also report x-ray-absorption spectroscopy in the water window spectral region (284-543 eV) using a high flux high-order harmonic generation x-ray supercontinuum with 10^{9} photons/s in 1% bandwidth, 3 orders of magnitude larger than has previously been possible using tabletop sources. Since this x-ray radiation emerges as a single attosecond-to-femtosecond pulse with peak brightness exceeding 10^{26} photons/s/mrad^{2}/mm^{2}/1% bandwidth, these novel coherent x-ray sources are ideal for probing the fastest molecular and materials processes on femtosecond-to-attosecond time scales and picometer length scales.