57 research outputs found

    Laser-induced nonsequential double ionization: kinematic constraints for the recollision-excitation-tunneling mechanism

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    We investigate the physical processes in which an electron, upon return to its parent ion, promotes a second electron to an excited state, from which it subsequently tunnels. Employing the strong-field approximation and saddle-point methods, we perform a detailed analysis of the dynamics of the two electrons, in terms of quantum orbits, and delimit constraints for their momentum components parallel to the laser-field polarization. The kinetic energy of the first electron, upon return, exhibits a cutoff slightly lower than 10Up10U_p, where UpU_p is the ponderomotive energy, as in rescattered above-threshold ionization (ATI). The second electron leaves the excited state in a direct ATI-like process, with the maximal energy of 2Up2U_p. We also compute electron-momentum distributions, whose maxima agree with our estimates and with other methods.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure

    Pathways to double ionization of atoms in strong fields

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    We discuss the final stages of double ionization of atoms in a strong linearly polarized laser field within a classical model. We propose that all trajectories leading to non-sequential double ionization pass close to a saddle in phase space which we identify and characterize. The saddle lies in a two degree of freedom subspace of symmetrically escaping electrons. The distribution of longitudinal momenta of ions as calculated within the subspace shows the double hump structure observed in experiments. Including a symmetric bending mode of the electrons allows us to reproduce the transverse ion momenta. We discuss also a path to sequential ionization and show that it does not lead to the observed momentum distributions.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures; fig.6 and 7 exchanged in the final version accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.

    Non-sequential triple ionization in strong fields

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    We consider the final stage of triple ionization of atoms in a strong linearly polarized laser field. We propose that for intensities below the saturation value for triple ionization the process is dominated by the simultaneous escape of three electrons from a highly excited intermediate complex. We identify within a classical model two pathways to triple ionization, one with a triangular configuration of electrons and one with a more linear one. Both are saddles in phase space. A stability analysis indicates that the triangular configuration has the larger cross sections and should be the dominant one. Trajectory simulations within the dominant symmetry subspace reproduce the experimentally observed distribution of ion momenta parallel to the polarization axis.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.

    Correlation dynamics between electrons and ions in the fragmentation of D2_2 molecules by short laser pulses

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    We studied the recollision dynamics between the electrons and D2+_2^+ ions following the tunneling ionization of D2_2 molecules in an intense short pulse laser field. The returning electron collisionally excites the D2+_2^+ ion to excited electronic states from there D2+_2^+ can dissociate or be further ionized by the laser field, resulting in D+^+ + D or D+^+ + D+^+, respectively. We modeled the fragmentation dynamics and calculated the resulting kinetic energy spectrum of D+^+ to compare with recent experiments. Since the recollision time is locked to the tunneling ionization time which occurs only within fraction of an optical cycle, the peaks in the D+^+ kinetic energy spectra provides a measure of the time when the recollision occurs. This collision dynamics forms the basis of the molecular clock where the clock can be read with attosecond precision, as first proposed by Corkum and coworkers. By analyzing each of the elementary processes leading to the fragmentation quantitatively, we identified how the molecular clock is to be read from the measured kinetic energy spectra of D+^+ and what laser parameters be used in order to measure the clock more accurately.Comment: 13 pages with 14 figure

    Resonant enhancements of high-order harmonic generation

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    Solving the one-dimensional time-dependent Schr\"odinger equation for simple model potentials, we investigate resonance-enhanced high-order harmonic generation, with emphasis on the physical mechanism of the enhancement. By truncating a long-range potential, we investigate the significance of the long-range tail, the Rydberg series, and the existence of highly excited states for the enhancements in question. We conclude that the channel closings typical of a short-range or zero-range potential are capable of generating essentially the same effects.Comment: 7 pages revtex, 4 figures (ps files

    One and two-center processes in high-order harmonic generation in diatomic molecules: influence of the internuclear separation

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    We analyze the influence of different recombination scenarios, involving one or two centers, on high-order harmonic generation (HHG) in diatomic molecules, for different values of the internuclear separation. We work within the strong-field approximation, and employ modified saddle-point equations, in which the structure of the molecule is incorporated. We find that the two-center interference patterns, attributed to high-order harmonic emission at spatially separated centers, are formed by the quantum interference of the orbits starting at a center CjC_{j} and finishing at a different center CÎœC_{\nu } in the molecule with those starting and ending at a same center Cj.C_{j}. Within our framework, we also show that contributions starting at different centers exhibit different orders of magnitude, due to the influence of additional potential-energy shifts. This holds even for small internuclear distances. Similar results can also be obtained by considering single-atom saddle-point equations and an adequate choice of molecular prefactors.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure

    Resonant Structures in the Low-Energy Electron Continuum for Single Ionization of Atoms in the Tunneling Regime

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    We present results of high-resolution experiments on single ionization of He, Ne and Ar by ultra-short (25 fs, 6 fs) 795 nm laser pulses at intensities 0.15-2.0x10^15 W/cm^2. We show that the ATI-like pattern can survive deep in the tunneling regime and that the atomic structure plays an important role in the formation of the low-energy photoelectron spectra even at high intensities. The absence of ponderomotive shifts, the splitting of the peaks and their degeneration for few-cycle pulses indicate that the observed structures originate from a resonant process.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
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