We study the excitation transfer in various geometric arrangements of rylene
dimers using absorption, fluorescence and transient absorption spectra.
Polarization and detection frequency dependencies of transient absorption track
the interplay of transfer and vibrational relaxation within the dyads. We have
resolved microscopic parametrization of intermolecular coupling between rylenes
and reproduced transport data. Dynamical sampling of molecular geometries
captures thermal fluctuations for Quantum Chemical estimate of couplings for
orthogonally arranged dyad, where static estimates vanish and normal mode
analysis of fluctuations underestimates them by an order of magnitude.
Nonperturbative accounts for the modulation of transport by strongly coupled
anharmonic vibrational modes is provided by a vibronic dimer model. Vibronic
dynamics is demonstrated to cover both the F\"{o}rster transport regime of
orthogonally arranged dyads and the strong coupling regime of parallel
chromophores and allows us to model signal variations along the detection
frequency