14 research outputs found
Optical gratings induced by field-free alignment of molecules
We analyze the alignment of molecules generated by a pair of crossed
ultra-short pump pulses of different polarizations by a technique based on the
induced time-dependent gratings. Parallel polarizations yield an intensity
grating, while perpendicular polarizations induce a polarization grating. We
show that both configurations can be interpreted at moderate intensity as an
alignment induced by a single polarized pump pulse. The advantage of the
perpendicular polarizations is to give a signal of alignment that is free from
the plasma contribution. Experiments on femtosecond transient gratings with
aligned molecules were performed in CO2 at room temperature in a static cell
and at 30 K in a molecular expansion jet.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, submitted to PR
Molecular movie of ultrafast coherent rotational dynamics of OCS
Recording molecular movies on ultrafast timescales has been a longstanding goal for unravelling detailed information about molecular dynamics. Here we present the direct experimental recording of very-high-resolution and -fidelity molecular movies over more than one-and-a-half periods of the laser-induced rotational dynamics of carbonylsulfide (OCS) molecules. Utilising the combination of single quantum-state selection and an optimised two-pulse sequence to create a tailored rotational wavepacket, an unprecedented degree of field-free alignment, 〈cos2θ2D〉 = 0.96 (〈cos2θ〉 = 0.94) is achieved, exceeding the theoretical limit for single-pulse alignment. The very rich experimentally observed quantum dynamics is fully recovered by the angular probability distribution obtained from solutions of the time-dependent Schrödinger equation with parameters refined against the experiment. The populations and phases of rotational states in the retrieved time-dependent three-dimensional wavepacket rationalises the observed very high degree of alignment
Alignement uni et tridimensionnel de molécules par impulsion laser femtoseconde
DIJON-BU Sciences Economie (212312102) / SudocSudocFranceF
Interference in the angular distribution of photoelectrons in superimposed XUV and optical laser fields
The angular distribution of photoelectrons ejected during the ionization of Ne atoms by extreme ultraviolet (XUV) free-electron laser radiation in the presence of an intense near infrared (NIR) dressing field was investigated experimentally and theoretically. A highly nonlinear process with absorption and emission of more than ten NIR photons results in the formation of numerous sidebands. The amplitude of the sidebands varies strongly with the emission angle and the angular distribution pattern reveals clear signatures of interferences between the different angular momenta for the outgoing electron in the multi-photon process. As a specific feature, the central photoelectron line is characterized at the highest NIR fields by an angular distribution, which is peaked perpendicularly to both the XUV and NIR polarization directions. Experimental results are reproduced by a theoretical model based on the strong field approximation
Time-Resolved Photoelectron Diffraction of Laser-Aligned Molecules
Static and time-resolved photoelectron diffraction of laser-aligned polyatomic molecules photoionized by Free-Electron Laser pulses is presented. The results are a proof-of-principle for imaging dynamic structural changes in molecules with femtosecond temporal and Angstrom spatial resolution
Coulomb explosion imaging of small organic molecules at LCLS
Fragmentation of small organic molecules by intense few-femtosecond X-ray free-electron laser pulses has been studied using Coulomb explosion imaging. By measuring kinetic energies and emission angles of the ionic fragments in coincidence, we disentangle different fragmentation pathways, for certain cases can reconstruct molecular geometry at the moment of explosion, and show how it depends on LCLS pulse duration
Characterizing the multi-dimensional reaction dynamics of dihalomethanes using XUV-induced Coulomb explosion imaging
Site-selective probing of iodine 4d orbitals at 13.1 nm was used to characterize the photolysis of CHI and CHBrI initiated at 202.5 nm. Time-dependent fragment ion momenta were recorded using Coulomb explosion imaging mass spectrometry and used to determine the structural dynamics of the dissociating molecules. Correlations between these fragment momenta, as well as the onset times of electron transfer reactions between them, indicate that each molecule can undergo neutral three-body photolysis. For CHI, the structural evolution of the neutral molecule was simultaneously characterized along the C–I and I–C–I coordinates, demonstrating the sensitivity of these measurements to nuclear motion along multiple degrees of freedom
Time-Resolved X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy: Ultrafast Dynamics in CS Probed at the S 2p Edge
Recent developments in X-ray free-electron lasers have enabled a novel site-selective probe of coupled nuclear and electronic dynamics in photoexcited molecules, time-resolved X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (TRXPS). We present results from a joint experimental and theoretical TRXPS study of the well-characterized ultraviolet photodissociation of CS2, a prototypical system for understanding non-adiabatic dynamics. These results demonstrate that the sulfur 2p binding energy is sensitive to changes in the nuclear structure following photoexcitation, which ultimately leads to dissociation into CS and S photoproducts. We are able to assign the main X-ray spectroscopic features to the CS and S products via comparison to a first-principles determination of the TRXPS based on ab initio multiple-spawning simulations. Our results demonstrate the use of TRXPS as a local probe of complex ultrafast photodissociation dynamics involving multimodal vibrational coupling, nonradiative transitions between electronic states, and multiple final product channels