Search Results

Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Item

Towards time resolved core level photoelectron spectroscopy with femtosecond x-ray free-electron lasers

2008, Pietzsch, A., Föhlisch, A., Beye, M., Deppe, M., Hennies, F., Nagasono, M., Suljotil, E., Wurth, W., Gahl, C., Dörich, K., Melnikov, A.

We have performed core level photoelectron spectroscopy on a W(110) single crystal with femtosecond XUV pulses from the free-electron laser at Hamburg (FLASH). We demonstrate experimentally and through theoretical modelling that for a suitable range of photon fluences per pulse, time-resolved photoemission experiments on solid surfaces are possible. Using FLASH pulses in combination with a synchronized optical laser, we have performed femtosecond time-resolved core-level photoelectron spectroscopy and observed sideband formation on the W 4f lines indicating a cross correlation between femtosecond optical and XUV pulses. © IOP Publishing Ltd and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Item

Molecular orbital imprint in laser-driven electron recollision

2018, Schell, Felix, Bredtmann, Timm, Schulz, Claus Peter, Patchkovskii, Serguei, Vrakking, Marc J. J., Mikosch, Jochen

Electrons released by strong-field ionization from atoms and molecules or in solids can be accelerated in the oscillating laser field and driven back to their ion core. The ensuing interaction, phase-locked to the optical cycle, initiates the central processes underlying attosecond science. A common assumption assigns a single, welldefined return direction to the recolliding electron. We study laser-induced electron rescattering associated with two different ionization continua in the same, spatially aligned, polyatomic molecule. We show by experiment and theory that the electron return probability is molecular frame-dependent and carries structural information on the ionized orbital. The returning wave packet structure has to be accounted for in analyzing strong-field spectroscopy experiments that critically depend on the interaction of the laser-driven continuum electron, such as laser-induced electron diffraction.