Attosecond High-harmonic Spectroscopy of Atoms and Molecules Using Mid-infrared Sources

Attosecond High-harmonic Spectroscopy of Atoms and Molecules Using Mid-infrared Sources

Author: Stephen Bradley Schoun

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 234

ISBN-13:

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The amplitude and phase of the complex photoionization/photorecombination dipole matrix element of atoms and simple linear molecules is measured with sub-femtosecond time resolution and sub-electronvolt spectral resolution using High Harmonic Spectroscopy (HHS). The first known measurement of the dipole phase jump at a Cooper minimum is reported for the 3p orbital of argon. Also, the angle-dependent dipole of nitrogen is measured using rotationally-aligned molecular ensembles. In contrast with previous studies, which were limited by traditional shorter-wavelength near-infrared laser sources, only a single orbital is sufficient to explain the nitrogen results, which are in excellent agreement with accurate theoretical scattering-wave dipole calculations. All of these experiments benefit from the extended extreme-ultraviolet cutoff, and improved spectral resolution, afforded by the use of long-wavelength mid-infrared driving laser sources. This work extends our understanding of the interaction of light and matter on the timescale of the electron's motion, the attosecond (1 as = 10−18s). The experimental results presented here lend credence to the methodology of molecular self-imaging by laser-induced ionization and recombination of a molecule's own electron. The successes and limitations of HHS as a tool for ultrafast atomic and molecular imaging are discussed. Finally, the feasibility is examined of using HHS to measure the temporal evolution of complicated chemical dynamics with attosecond precision.


High Harmonic Spectroscopy of Complex Molecules

High Harmonic Spectroscopy of Complex Molecules

Author: Michael C. H. Wong

Publisher:

Published: 2014

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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Advancements in spectroscopy rely on the improvement of two fundamental characteristics: spatial and temporal resolutions. High harmonic spectroscopy (HHS) is an emerging technology that promises the capability of studying the fastest processes that exist today: electronic motion with angstrom spatial and attosecond temporal resolution. HHS is based on the process of high harmonic generation (HHG) which arises from the nonlinear interaction between an intense, infrared laser pulse and an atomic or molecular gaseous medium, producing coherent, attosecond-duration bursts of extreme ultraviolet (XUV) light. In order to utilize the attosecond pulses for spectroscopic measurements, it is necessary to improve the conversion efficiency of HHG. Chapter 2 of this thesis describes the improvements we make to the HHG source in order to obtain high XUV photon flux and we report on the nonlinear ionization of atomic systems using these pulses in Chapter 6. In Chapters 3 - 5, we describe several HHG experiments in complex, polyatomic molecules in order to promote the use of HHS as a general spectroscopic tool. Amplitude modulations in high harmonic spectra of complex molecules can be attributed to several types of interference conditions that depend on a system's molecular or electronic structure such as recombination with multiple centres or dynamical interference from multi-orbital contributions to ionization. Our results demonstrate the capability of HHS to extract useful information on molecular and electronic structure from large, polyatomic molecules directly from their high harmonic spectra. Furthermore, we use HHS to investigate the suppression of ionization in complex molecules due to quantum destructive interference during ionization as well as the distinguishability of emitted harmonic spectra from molecular isomers. Chapter 6 explores the study of multi-electron dynamics in complex molecules using XUV multiphoton ionization of atoms and molecules as well as the ionization and fragmentation of C60 which has hundreds of delocalized valence electrons. This thesis also describes the author's role in the design and fabrication of a time-of- flight mass spectrometer (Section 6.1) as well as an HHG detector system (Appendix A).


Handbook of Laser Technology and Applications

Handbook of Laser Technology and Applications

Author: Chunlei Guo

Publisher: CRC Press

Published: 2021-06-23

Total Pages: 563

ISBN-13: 131538955X

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This comprehensive handbook gives a fully updated guide to lasers and laser technologies, including the complete range of their technical applications. The first volume outlines the fundamental components of lasers, their properties, and working principles. Key Features: • Offers a complete update of the original, bestselling work, including many brand-new chapters. • Deepens the introduction to fundamentals, from laser design and fabrication to host matrices for solid-state lasers, energy level diagrams, hosting materials, dopant energy levels, and lasers based on nonlinear effects. • Covers new laser types, including quantum cascade lasers, silicon-based lasers, titanium sapphire lasers, terahertz lasers, bismuth-doped fiber lasers, and diode-pumped alkali lasers. • Discusses the latest applications, e.g., lasers in microscopy, high-speed imaging, attosecond metrology, 3D printing, optical atomic clocks, time-resolved spectroscopy, polarization and profile measurements, pulse measurements, and laser-induced fluorescence detection. • Adds new sections on laser materials processing, laser spectroscopy, lasers in imaging, lasers in environmental sciences, and lasers in communications. This handbook is the ideal companion for scientists, engineers, and students working with lasers, including those in optics, electrical engineering, physics, chemistry, biomedicine, and other relevant areas.


Probing Femtosecond and Attosecond Electronic and Chiral Dynamics

Probing Femtosecond and Attosecond Electronic and Chiral Dynamics

Author: Samuel Beaulieu

Publisher:

Published: 2018

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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This thesis manuscript is articulated around the investigation of the interaction between ultrashort light pulses and gas-phase atoms, polyatomic and chiral molecules. Using the toolboxes developed in attosecond and strong-field physics as well as in femtochemistry, our general goal is to reach a better understanding of subtle effects underlying ultrafast light-induced dynamics in matter.To do so, we developed cutting-edge near-infrared and mid-infrared few-cycle light sources, which were used to build a water-window soft-X-ray source based on high order harmonic generation (HHG), as well as to study new HHG channels involving highly-excited (Rydberg) states. The latter study revealed a delayed HHG emission from the ionization of Rydberg states and radiative recombination onto the electronicground state, triggering our interest in the role of Rydberg states in strong-field physics. This led us to investigate the laser-induced XUV Free Induced Decay from electronic wave packets as a new background-free 2D spectroscopic technique.More over, we have found out that strong-field interaction with a well prepared coherent superposition of electronic states led to the generation of hyper-Ramanlines concomitant with standard high-order harmonics. These spectral features were predicted in the early-days theoretical calculations of HHG but had never been reported experimentally.After these experiments in rare gas atoms, we moved to molecular targets, in whichlight-induced electronic excitation can trigger nuclear dynamics. Using simple benchmark molecules, we have studied dynamics involving the participation of both nuclear and electronic degrees of freedom: first, we studied the ultrafast non adiabatic photoisomerization of the acetylene cation into vinylidene cation, andsecond, we investigated the coherent control of electron localization during molecular photodissociation of H2+. The simplicity of these molecular targets enabled the comparison of the experimental results with state-of-the-art theoretical calculations,revealing the importance of the coupling between nuclear and electronic degrees of freedom in photoinduced molecular dynamics.The other major pillar of this thesis is the study of ionization of chiral molecules usingchiral light pulses. It has been known since the 70s that the ionization from an ensemble of randomly oriented chiral molecules, using circularly polarized light pulse,leads to a strong forward-backward asymmetry in the number of emitted photoelectrons, along the light propagation axis (Photoelectron Circular Dichroism,PECD). Prior to this thesis, PECD was widely studied at synchrotron facilities (single photonionization) and had recently been demonstrated using table-top lasers in resonant-enhanced multiphoton ionization schemes. In this thesis, we have shownthat PECD is a universal effect, i.e. that it emerges in all ionization regimes, from single photon ionization, to few-photon ionization, to above-threshold ionization, up to the tunneling ionization regime. This bridges the gap between chiral photoionizationand strong-field physics. Next, we have shown how the combination of standard femtochemistry approaches and PECD can be used to follow the dynamics of photoexcited chiral molecules using time-resolved PECD. Using similar experimental approaches, but by using pulse sequences with counter-intuitive polarization states,we have demonstrated a novel electric dipolar chiroptical effect, called Photoexcitation Circular Dichroism (PXCD), which emerges as a directional and chirosensitive electron current when multiple excited bound states of chiral molecules are coherently populated with chiral light. Last, we introduced a time-domain perspective on chiral photoionization by measuring the forward-backward asymmetry of photoionization delays in chiral molecules photoionized by chiral light pulses. Our work thus carried chiral-sensitive studies down to the femtosecond and attosecond ranges.


Molecular Spectroscopy and Quantum Dynamics

Molecular Spectroscopy and Quantum Dynamics

Author: Roberto Marquardt

Publisher: Elsevier

Published: 2020-09-18

Total Pages: 376

ISBN-13: 0128172355

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Molecular Spectroscopy and Quantum Dynamics, an exciting new work edited by Professors Martin Quack and Roberto Marquardt, contains comprehensive information on the current state-of-the-art experimental and theoretical methods and techniques used to unravel ultra-fast phenomena in atoms, molecules and condensed matter, along with future perspectives on the field. Contains new insights into the quantum dynamics and spectroscopy of electronic and nuclear motion Presents the most recent developments in the detection and interpretation of ultra-fast phenomena Includes a discussion of the importance of these phenomena for the understanding of chemical reaction dynamics and kinetics in relation to molecular spectra and structure


Multiphoton Processes and Attosecond Physics

Multiphoton Processes and Attosecond Physics

Author: Kaoru Yamanouchi

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2012-08-15

Total Pages: 394

ISBN-13: 3642289487

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Recent advances in ultrashort pulsed laser technology have opened new frontiers in atomic, molecular and optical sciences. The 12th International Conference on Multiphoton Processes (ICOMP12) and the 3rd International Conference on Attosecond Physics (ATTO3), held jointly in Sapporo, Japan, during July 3-8, showcased studies at the forefront of research on multiphoton processes and attosecond physics. This book summarizes presentations and discussions from these two conferences.


Progress in Ultrafast Intense Laser Science XIII

Progress in Ultrafast Intense Laser Science XIII

Author: Kaoru Yamanouchi

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2017-12-22

Total Pages: 234

ISBN-13: 3319648403

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This thirteenth volume in the PUILS series covers a broad range of topics from this interdisciplinary research field, focusing on atoms, molecules, and clusters interacting in intense laser field and high-order harmonics generation and their applications. The series delivers up-to-date reviews of progress in ultrafast intense laser science, the interdisciplinary research field spanning atomic and molecular physics, molecular science, and optical science, which has been stimulated by the developments in ultrafast laser technologies. Each volume compiles peer-reviewed articles authored by researchers at the forefront of each their own subfields of UILS. Typically, each chapter opens with an overview of the topics to be discussed, so that researchers unfamiliar to the subfield, as well as graduate students, can grasp the importance and attractions of the research topic at hand; these are followed by reports of cutting-edge discoveries.


Mid-Infrared Coherent Sources and Applications

Mid-Infrared Coherent Sources and Applications

Author: Majid Ebrahim-Zadeh

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2008-01-02

Total Pages: 630

ISBN-13: 140206439X

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Covering fundamental principles and the state of the art, this is a collection of reviews from experts in mid-infrared (mid-IR) coherent sources. Among the sources covered are optical parametric oscillators, difference frequency generators, and the most recent broadband crystalline, quantum cascade, and fiber lasers. The authors show how advances in mid-IR science and technology make these sources indispensable for a variety of applications.


Attosecond and XUV Physics

Attosecond and XUV Physics

Author: Thomas Schultz

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2013-11-13

Total Pages: 624

ISBN-13: 3527677658

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This book provides fundamental knowledge in the fields of attosecond science and free electron lasers, based on the insight that the further development of both disciplines can greatly benefit from mutual exposure and interaction between the two communities. With respect to the interaction of high intensity lasers with matter, it covers ultrafast lasers, high-harmonic generation, attosecond pulse generation and characterization. Other chapters review strong-field physics, free electron lasers and experimental instrumentation. Written in an easy accessible style, the book is aimed at graduate and postgraduate students so as to support the scientific training of early stage researchers in this emerging field. Special emphasis is placed on the practical approach of building experiments, allowing young researchers to develop a wide range of scientific skills in order to accelerate the development of spectroscopic techniques and their implementation in scientific experiments. The editors are managers of a research network devoted to the education of young scientists, and this book idea is based on a summer school organized by the ATTOFEL network.


Theory of Nonlinear Propagation of High Harmonics Generated in a Gaseous Medium

Theory of Nonlinear Propagation of High Harmonics Generated in a Gaseous Medium

Author: Cheng Jin

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2013-09-11

Total Pages: 169

ISBN-13: 3319016253

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Theory of Nonlinear Propagation of High Harmonics Generated in a Gaseous Medium establishes the theoretical tools to study High-Order Harmonic Generation (HHG) by intense ultrafast infrared lasers in atoms and molecules. The macroscopic propagation of both laser and high-harmonic fields is taken into account by solving Maxwell's wave equations, while the single-atom or single-molecule response is treated with a quantitative rescattering theory by solving the time-dependent Schrödinger equation. This book demonstrates for the first time that observed experimental HHG spectra of atoms and molecules can be accurately reproduced theoretically when precise experimental conditions are known. The macroscopic HHG can be expressed as a product of a macroscopic wave packet and a photorecombination cross section, where the former depends on laser and experimental conditions while the latter is the property of target atoms or molecules. The factorization makes it possible to retrieve microscopically atomic or molecular structure information from the measured macroscopic HHG spectra. This book also investigates other important issues about HHG, such as contributions from multiple molecular orbitals, the minimum in the HHG spectrum, the spatial mode of laser beams, and the generation of an isolated attosecond pulse. Additionally, this book presents the photoelectron angular distribution of aligned molecules ionized by the HHG light.