1 research outputs found
Electron Diffraction of Superfluid Helium Droplets
We present experimental results of
electron diffraction of superfluid
helium droplets and droplets doped with phthalocyanine gallium chloride
and discuss the possibility of performing the same experiment with
a laser aligned sample. The diffraction profile of pure droplets demonstrates
dependence on the nozzle temperature, that is, on the average size
of the droplets. Larger clusters demonstrate faster decay with increasing
momentum transfer, whereas smaller clusters converge to isolated gas
phase molecules at source temperatures of 18 K and higher. Electron
diffraction of doped droplets shows similar modified molecular scattering
intensity as that of the corresponding gas phase molecules. On the
basis of fittings of the scattering profile, the number of remaining
helium atoms of the doped droplets is estimated to be on the order
of hundreds. This result offers guidance in assessing the possibility
of electron diffraction from laser aligned molecules doped in superfluid
helium droplets