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Now showing 1 - 6 of 6
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    A molecular clock for autoionization decay
    (Bristol : IOP Publ., 2017-06-14) Medišauskas, Lukas; Bello, Roger Y.; Palacios, Alicia; González-Castrillo, Alberto; Morales, Felipe; Plimak, Lev; Smirnova, Olga; Martín, Fernando; Ivanov, Misha Yu
    The ultrafast decay of highly excited electronic states is resolved with a molecular clock technique, using the vibrational motion associated to the ionic bound states as a time-reference. We demonstrate the validity of the method in the context of autoionization of the hydrogen molecule, where nearly exact full dimensional ab-initio calculations are available. The vibrationally resolved photoionization spectrum provides a time–energy mapping of the autoionization process into the bound states that is used to fully reconstruct the decay in time. A resolution of a fraction of the vibrational period is achieved. Since no assumptions are made on the underlying coupled electron–nuclear dynamics, the reconstruction procedure can be applied to describe the general problem of the decay of highly excited states in other molecular targets.
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    Anisotropic photoemission time delays close to a Fano resonance
    ([London] : Nature Publishing Group UK, 2018) Cirelli, Claudio; Marante, Carlos; Heuser, Sebastian; Petersson, C.L.M.; Galán, Álvaro Jiménez; Argenti, Luca; Zhong, Shiyang; Busto, David; Isinger, Marcus; Nandi, Saikat; Maclot, Sylvain; Rading, Linnea; Johnsson, Per; Gisselbrecht, Mathieu; Lucchini, Matteo; Gallmann, Lukas; Dahlström, J. Marcus; Lindroth, Eva; L’Huillier, Anne; Martín, Fernando; Keller, Ursula
    Electron correlation and multielectron effects are fundamental interactions that govern many physical and chemical processes in atomic, molecular and solid state systems. The process of autoionization, induced by resonant excitation of electrons into discrete states present in the spectral continuum of atomic and molecular targets, is mediated by electron correlation. Here we investigate the attosecond photoemission dynamics in argon in the 20-40 eV spectral range, in the vicinity of the 3s -1 np autoionizing resonances. We present measurements of the differential photoionization cross section and extract energy and angle-dependent atomic time delays with an attosecond interferometric method. With the support of a theoretical model, we are able to attribute a large part of the measured time delay anisotropy to the presence of autoionizing resonances, which not only distort the phase of the emitted photoelectron wave packet but also introduce an angular dependence.
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    Femtosecond XUV–IR induced photodynamics in the methyl iodide cation
    ([London] : IOP, 2021) Murillo-Sánchez, Marta L.; Reitsma, Geert; Poullain, Sonia Marggi; Fernández-Milán, Pedro; González-Vázquez, Jesús; de Nalda, Rebeca; Martín, Fernando; Vrakking, Marc J. J.; Kornilov, Oleg; Bañares, Luis
    The time-resolved photodynamics of the methyl iodide cation (CH3I+) are investigated by means of femtosecond XUV-IR pump-probe spectroscopy. A time-delay-compensated XUV monochromator is employed to isolate a specific harmonic, the 9th harmonic of the fundamental 800 nm (13.95 eV, 88.89 nm), which is used as a pump pulse to prepare the cation in several electronic states. A time-delayed IR probe pulse is used to probe the dissociative dynamics on the first excited state potential energy surface. Photoelectrons and photofragment ions - and I+ - are detected by velocity map imaging. The experimental results are complemented with high level ab initio calculations for the potential energy curves of the electronic states of CH3I+ as well as with full dimension on-the-fly trajectory calculations on the first electronically excited state, considering the presence of the IR pulse. The and I+ pump-probe transients reflect the role of the IR pulse in controlling the photodynamics of CH3I+ in the state, mainly through the coupling to the ground state and to the excited state manifold. Oscillatory features are observed and attributed to a vibrational wave packet prepared in the state. The IR probe pulse induces a coupling between electronic states leading to a slow depletion of fragments after the cation is transferred to the ground states and an enhancement of I+ fragments by absorption of IR photons yielding dissociative photoionization. © 2021 The Author(s). Published by IOP Publishing Ltd on behalf of the Institute of Physics and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft.
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    Sub-laser-cycle control of coupled electron–nuclear dynamics at a conical intersection
    ([London] : IOP, 2015) Richter, Maria; Bouakline, Foudhil; González-Vázquez, Jesús; Martínez-Fernández, Lara; Corral, Inés; Patchkovskii, Serguei; Morales, Felipe; Ivanov, Misha; Martín, Fernando; Smirnova, Olga
    Nonadiabatic processes play a fundamental role in the understanding of photochemical processes in excited polyatomic molecules. A particularly important example is that of radiationless electronic relaxation at conical intersections (CIs). We discuss new opportunities for controlling coupled electron–nuclear dynamics at CIs, offered by the advent of nearly single-cycle, phase-stable, mid-infrared laser pulses. To illustrate the control mechanism, a two-dimensional model of the NO2 molecule is considered. The key idea of the control scheme is to match the time scale of the laser field oscillations to the characteristic time scale of the wave packet transit through the CI. The instantaneous laser field changes the shape and position of the CI as the wave packet passes through. As the CI moves in the laser field, it 'slices' through the wave packet, sculpting it in the coordinate and momentum space in a way that is sensitive to the carrier-envelope phase of the control pulse. We find that the electronic coherence imparted on the sub-laser-cycle time scale manifests during much longer nuclear dynamics that follow on the many tens of femtosecond time scale. Control efficiency as a function of molecular orientation is analyzed, showing that modest alignment is sufficient for showing the described effects.
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    Signatures of attosecond electronic–nuclear dynamics in the one-photon ionization of molecular hydrogen: analytical model versusab initiocalculations
    ([London] : IOP, 2015) Medišauskas, Lukas; Morales, Felipe; Palacios, Alicia; González-Castrillo, Alberto; Plimak, Lev; Smirnova, Olga; Martín, Fernando; Ivanov, Misha Yu
    We present an analytical model based on the time-dependent WKB approximation to reproduce the photoionization spectra of an H2 molecule in the autoionization region. We explore the nondissociative channel, which is the major contribution after one-photon absorption, and we focus on the features arising in the energy differential spectra due to the interference between the direct and the autoionization pathways. These features depend on both the timescale of the electronic decay of the autoionizing state and the time evolution of the vibrational wavepacket created in this state. With full ab initio calculations and with a one-dimensional approach that only takes into account the nuclear wavepacket associated to the few relevant electronic states we compare the ground state, the autoionizing state, and the background continuum electronic states. Finally, we illustrate how these features transform from molecular-like to atomic-like by increasing the mass of the system, thus making the electronic decay time shorter than the nuclear wavepacket motion associated with the resonant state. In other words, autoionization then occurs faster than the molecular dissociation into neutrals.
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    Reconstruction of the time-dependent electronic wave packet arising from molecular autoionization
    (Washington, DC [u.a.] : Assoc., 2018) Bello, Roger Y.; Canton, Sophie E.; Jelovina, Denis; Bozek, John D.; Rude, Bruce; Smirnova, Olga; Ivanov, Mikhail Y.; Palacios, Alicia; Martín, Fernando
    Autoionizing resonances are paradigmatic examples of two-path wave interferences between direct photoionization, which takes a few attoseconds, and ionization via quasi-bound states, which takes much longer. Time-resolving the evolution of these interferences has been a long-standing goal, achieved recently in the helium atom owing to progress in attosecond technologies. However, already for the hydrogen molecule, similar time imaging has remained beyond reach due to the complex interplay between fast nuclear and electronic motions. We show how vibrationally resolved photoelectron spectra of H2 allow one to reconstruct the associated subfemtosecond autoionization dynamics by using the ultrafast nuclear dynamics as an internal clock, thus forgoing ultrashort pulses. Our procedure should be general for autoionization dynamics in molecules containing light nuclei, which are ubiquitous in chemistry and biology.