38th Annual Meeting of the Division of Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics
Volume 52, Number 7
Tuesday–Saturday, June 5–9, 2007;
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Session B3: Ultrafast Collision Processes
10:30 AM–12:54 PM,
Wednesday, June 6, 2007
TELUS Convention Centre
Room: Glen 201-203
Chair: H. Schmidt-Boecking, University of Frankfurt
Abstract ID: BAPS.2007.DAMOP.B3.4
Abstract: B3.00004 : Laser-induced nonsequential double and multiple ionization of atoms: what can be learned from models*
12:18 PM–12:54 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Wilhelm Becker
(Max-Born-Institut)
The significance of a nonsequential channel to double and
multiple ionization
in some parameter regimes has been long since established. More
recently,
at least for near-infrared frequencies, consensus has developed
that the
mechanism is related to recollision of a tunnel-ionized electron
with its
parent ion. With ab-initio calculations being extremely time
consuming,
$S$-matrix theory allows for comparatively straightforward
computation, once
the responsible diagrams have been identified. \\
A crucial element of such a
description is the electron-electron interaction that is
responsible for
the ionization of the second (or more) electron(s) by the first.
In this talk,
I discuss different choices for this interaction and their
consequences for
the ion and electron momentum distributions that have been
recorded in
experiments. I also discuss various methods of how to compute the
$S$-matrix
element, including saddle-point methods that lead to the concept
of quantum
orbits and a certain limit that is classical but for the initial
tunneling
of the first electron. If the electron-electron interaction is of
contact
type, the latter model becomes a statistical model, which only
depends on the
tunneling rate, the rescattering kinematics, and the volume of
phase space for
given final momenta. This statistical model can also be applied
for an
elliptically polarized laser field. For ellipticities exceeding
$\xi \approx 0.3$, interesting effects begin to develop in the
momentum
distributions.\\
An additional parameter that reflects the joint
action of the electron-electron, electron-ion, and electron-field
dynamics,
can be introduced by assuming a delay between the time of
recollision
and the later time when a subset of electrons has thermalized
with the
returning electron and leaves the immediate vicinity of the ion.
The existence of such a delay is supported by classical-trajectory
calculations. Comparing model calculations with reality one can
infer a
value of this delay time. For triple and quadruple ionization of
neon,
a thermalization time below 500 attoseconds gives good agreement
with
the existing data.
In collaboration with P.B. Corkum, C.F.M. Faria, S.P. Goreslavski,
P.J. Ho, X. Liu, S.V. Popruzhenko, H. Schomerus, and N.
Shvetsov-Shilovski.
*Supported in part by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2007.DAMOP.B3.4