61 research outputs found
Field-free orientation of CO molecules by femtosecond two-color laser fields
We report the first experimental observation of non-adiabatic field-free
orientation of a heteronuclear diatomic molecule (CO) induced by an intense
two-color (800 and 400 nm) femtosecond laser field. We monitor orientation by
measuring fragment ion angular distributions after Coulomb explosion with an
800 nm pulse. The orientation of the molecules is controlled by the relative
phase of the two-color field. The results are compared to quantum mechanical
rigid rotor calculations. The demonstrated method can be applied to study
molecular frame dynamics under field-free conditions in conjunction with a
variety of spectroscopy methods, such as high-harmonic generation, electron
diffraction and molecular frame photoemission
Attosecond control of electron dynamics in carbon monoxide
Laser pulses with stable electric field waveforms establish the opportunity
to achieve coherent control on attosecond timescales. We present experimental
and theoretical results on the steering of electronic motion in a
multi-electron system. A very high degree of light-waveform control over the
directional emission of C+ and O+ fragments from the dissociative ionization of
CO was observed. Ab initio based model calculations reveal contributions to the
control related to the ionization and laser-induced population transfer between
excited electronic states of CO+ during dissociation
Waveform control of orientation-dependent ionization of DCl in few-cycle laser fields
Strong few-cycle light fields with stable electric field waveforms allow controlling electrons on time scales down to the attosecond domain. We have studied the dissociative ionization of randomly oriented DCl in 5 fs light fields at 720 nm in the tunneling regime. Momentum distributions of D+ and Cl+ fragments were recorded via velocity-map imaging. A waveformdependent anti-correlated directional emission of D+ and Cl+ fragments is observed. Comparison of our results with calculations indicates that tailoring of the light field via the carrier envelope phase permits the control over the orientation of DCl+ and in turn the directional emission of charged fragments upon the breakup of the molecular ion
SISTEM MONITORING MENGGUNAKAN KAMERA IP
RIFKI YUSUF SETIAWAN, 2010, SYSTEM MONITORING USING IP
CAMERA. 3rd Diploma Program Computer Science, Faculty of Mathematics and
Natural Science, Sebelas Maret University of Surakarta.
The level of criminality was quite high, pushed the existence of the
production of the monitoring system which gave the more effective safety.The
main aim of this final report is to investigate the way of designing and developing
program to monitor a room by using IP camera.
The data were collected though experiment, observation, and library
research. This study revealed that IP Camera was capable of monitoring room
automatically and the software to manage the displayed was created by delphi 7 .
Based on the findings, it could be concluded that we could monitor a
room with IP camera.
Keyword : IP camera, security, delphi 7, monitorin
Orientation Dependence of the Ionization of CO and NO in an Intense Femtosecond Two-Color Laser Field
Two-color (800- and 400-nm) short (45-fs) linearly polarized pulses are used to ionize and dissociate CO and NO. The emission of Cq+, Nq+, and Oâș fragments indicates that the higher ionization rate occurs when the peak electric field points from C to O in CO and from N to O in NO. This preferred direction is in agreement with that predicted by Stark-corrected strong-field-approximation calculations
Attosecond electron spectroscopy using a novel interferometric pump-probe technique
We present an interferometric pump-probe technique for the characterization
of attosecond electron wave packets (WPs) that uses a free WP as a reference to
measure a bound WP. We demonstrate our method by exciting helium atoms using an
attosecond pulse with a bandwidth centered near the ionization threshold, thus
creating both a bound and a free WP simultaneously. After a variable delay, the
bound WP is ionized by a few-cycle infrared laser precisely synchronized to the
original attosecond pulse. By measuring the delay-dependent photoelectron
spectrum we obtain an interferogram that contains both quantum beats as well as
multi-path interference. Analysis of the interferogram allows us to determine
the bound WP components with a spectral resolution much better than the inverse
of the attosecond pulse duration.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Subcycle controlled charge-directed reactivity with few-cycle midinfrared pulses
The steering of electron motion in molecules is accessible with waveform-
controlled few-cycle laser light and may control the outcome of light-induced
chemical reactions. An optical cycle of light, however, is much shorter than
the duration of the fastest dissociation reactions, severely limiting the
degree of control that can be achieved. To overcome this limitation, we
extended the control metrology to the midinfrared studying the prototypical
dissociative ionization of D2 at 2.1ââÎŒm. Pronounced subcycle control of the
directional D+ ion emission from the fragmentation of D+2 is observed,
demonstrating unprecedented charge-directed reactivity. Two reaction pathways,
showing directional ion emission, could be observed and controlled
simultaneously for the first time. Quantum-dynamical calculations elucidate
the dissociation channels, their observed phase relation, and the control
mechanisms
Incorporating real time velocity map image reconstruction into closed-loop coherent control
We report techniques developed to utilize three-dimensional momentum information as feedback in adaptive femtosecond control of molecular dynamics. Velocity map imaging is used to obtain the three-dimensional momentum map of the dissociating ions following interaction with a shaped intense ultrafast laser pulse. In order to recover robust feedback information, however, the two-dimensional momentum projection from the detector must be inverted to reconstruct the full three-dimensional momentum of the photofragments. These methods are typically slow or require manual inputs and are therefore accomplished offline after the images have been obtained. Using an algorithm based upon an âonion-peelingâ (also known as âback projectionâ) method, we are able to invert 1040 Ă 1054 pixel images in under 1 s. This rapid inversion allows the full photofragment momentum to be used as feedback in a closed-loop adaptive control scheme, in which a genetic algorithm tailors an ultrafast laser pulse to optimize a specific outcome. Examples of three-dimensional velocity map image based control applied to strong-field dissociation of CO and O2 are presented
Carrier - envelope phase-tagged imaging of the controlled electron acceleration from SiO2 nanospheres in intense few-cycle laser fields
Waveform-controlled light fields offer the possibility of manipulating
ultrafast electronic processes on sub-cycle timescales. The optical lightwave
control of the collective electron motion in nanostructured materials is key
to the design of electronic devices operating at up to petahertz frequencies.
We have studied the directional control of the electron emission from 95 nm
diameter SiO2 nanoparticles in few-cycle laser fields with a well-defined
waveform. Projections of the three-dimensional (3D) electron momentum
distributions were obtained via single-shot velocity-map imaging (VMI), where
phase tagging allowed retrieving the laser waveform for each laser shot. The
application of this technique allowed us to efficiently suppress background
contributions in the data and to obtain very accurate information on the
amplitude and phase of the waveform-dependent electron emission. The
experimental data that are obtained for 4 fs pulses centered at 720 nm at
different intensities in the range (1â4) Ă 1013 W cmâ2 are compared to quasi-
classical mean-field Monte-Carlo simulations. The model calculations identify
electron backscattering from the nanoparticle surface in highly dynamical
localized fields as the main process responsible for the energetic electron
emission from the nanoparticles. The local field sensitivity of the electron
emission observed in our studies can serve as a foundation for future research
on propagation effects for larger particles and field-induced material changes
at higher intensities
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