2005 36th Meeting of the Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
Tuesday–Saturday, May 17–21, 2005;
Lincoln, Nebraska
Session K1: Attosecond and High Energy Density Physics
10:30 AM–12:54 PM,
Friday, May 20, 2005
Burnham Yates Conference Center
Room: Ballroom I
Co-Sponsoring
Unit:
DLS
Chair: Zenghu Chang, Kansas State University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.DAMOP.K1.2
Abstract: K1.00002 : Molecules in Intense Laser Fields and Electron-Nuclear Dynamics form Femto Attosecond Time Scales
11:06 AM–11:42 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Andr\'e Bandrauk
(Universit\'e de Sherbrooke)
The photophysic of atoms with high intensity lasers is dominated
by the
process of electron ionization and laser induced electron
recollision, with
the parent ion [1]. The recollision time can be tuned as a
function of laser
frequency to span few femtoseconds (fs) (10$^{-15}$sec) to
attoseconds
(asec) (10$^{-18}$sec) times. Molecules introduce a new
complexity, nuclear
time scales which for protons occur in the region 8-10 fs. In
intense
fields, dissociative ionization, allows for molecules to reach large
internuclear distances where Charge Resonance Enhanced Ionization
(CREI)
occurs thus increasing by several orders of magnitude ionization
rates
[2-3]. During recollision in molecules, electrons will undergo
Coulomb
refocusing. Both nonlinear effects, enhanced ionization and
refocusing of
the recollision electron leads to new efficient sources of high
order
harmonic generation (HOHG) from symmetric and nonsymmetric
molecules [4].
Molecular electron recollision can lead to Laser Induced Electron
Diffraction (LIED) [5] and molecular orbital tomography by
inversion of HOHG
spectra [6]. Finally, using asec pulses synthetized from HOHG
spectra [7],
one can create coherent molecular electron wavepackets. These are
localized
on asec time scales on various nuclei. Methods of detection and
characterization of such electron wavepackets in molecules will
be proposed
from numerical solutions of the time-dependent Schroedinger
equation for the
molecular ion, [8].
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\textbf{REFERENCES:}
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[1] P.B. Corkum, Phys. Rev. Lett. \textbf{71}, 1994 (1993).
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[2] T. Zuo, A.D. Bandrauk, Phys. Rev. \textbf{A52}, 2511 (1995).
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[3] T. Seideman, M.Y. Ivanov, P.B. Corkum, Phys. Rev.
Lett\textbf{. 75,}
2819 (1995).
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[4] G. Lagmago Kamta, A.D. Bandrauk, P.B. Corkum, Phys. Rev. Lett.
(submitted 2005).
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[5] T. Zuo, A.D. Bandrauk, P.B. Corkum, Chem. Phys. Lett.
\textbf{259}, 313
(1996).
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[6] J. Itatani et al., Nature \textbf{ 432, }867 (2004).
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[7] A.B. Yedder et al., Phys. Rev. \textbf{A69}, 041802 (2004).
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[8] G. Yudin et al., (submitted to Phys. Rev. Lett. 2005).
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.DAMOP.K1.2