5,510 research outputs found
Ultrafast Molecular Spectroscopy Using a Hollow-Core Photonic Crystal Fibre Light Source
We demonstrate, for the first time, the application of rare-gas filled
hollow-core photonic crystal fibres (HC-PCFs) as tuneable ultraviolet light
sources in femtosecond pump-probe spectroscopy. The time-resolved photoelectron
imaging technique reveals non-adiabatic dynamical processes operating on three
distinct timescales in the styrene molecule following excitation over the
242-258 nm region. These include ultrafast (<100 fs) internal conversion
between the S2(pipi*) and S1(pipi*) electronic states and subsequent
intramolecular vibrational energy redistribution within S1(pipi*). Compact,
cost-effective and highly efficient bench-top HC-PCF sources have huge
potential to open up many exciting new avenues for ultrafast spectroscopy in
the ultraviolet and vacuum ultraviolet spectral regions. We anticipate that our
initial validation of this approach will generate important impetus in this
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Mapping Atomic Motions with Electrons: Toward the Quantum Limit to Imaging Chemistry
Recent advances in ultrafast electron and X-ray diffraction have pushed imaging of structural dynamics into the femtosecond time domain, that is, the fundamental time scale of atomic motion. New physics can be reached beyond the scope of traditional diffraction or reciprocal space imaging. By exploiting the high time resolution, it has been possible to directly observe the collapse of nearly innumerable possible nuclear motions to a few key reaction modes that direct chemistry. It is this reduction in dimensionality in the transition state region that makes chemistry a transferable concept, with the same class of reactions being applicable to synthetic strategies to nearly arbitrary levels of complexity. The ability to image the underlying key reaction modes has been achieved with resolution to relative changes in atomic positions to better than 0.01 Ã…, that is, comparable to thermal motions. We have effectively reached the fundamental space-time limit with respect to the reaction energetics and imaging the acting forces. In the process of ensemble measured structural changes, we have missed the quantum aspects of chemistry. This perspective reviews the current state of the art in imaging chemistry in action and poses the challenge to access quantum information on the dynamics. There is the possibility with the present ultrabright electron and X-ray sources, at least in principle, to do tomographic reconstruction of quantum states in the form of a Wigner function and density matrix for the vibrational, rotational, and electronic degrees of freedom. Accessing this quantum information constitutes the ultimate demand on the spatial and temporal resolution of reciprocal space imaging of chemistry. Given the much shorter wavelength and corresponding intrinsically higher spatial resolution of current electron sources over X-rays, this Perspective will focus on electrons to provide an overview of the challenge on both the theory and the experimental fronts to extract the quantum aspects of molecular dynamics
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