39th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics
Volume 53, Number 7
Tuesday–Saturday, May 27–31, 2008;
State College, Pennsylvania
Session Q1: High Field, Short Pulse Physics
2:00 PM–4:24 PM,
Friday, May 30, 2008
Nittany Lion Inn
Room: Ballroom CDE
Chair: Lew Cocke, Kansas State University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2008.DAMOP.Q1.1
Abstract: Q1.00001 : Attosecond Precision Pump-Probe Experiments: Visualizing Molecular and Electronic Dynamics
2:00 PM–2:36 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Joachim Ullrich
(Max-Planck-Institut f\"ur Kernphysik, D-69117 Heidelberg)
A series of time-resolved experiments is reported with the goal
(i) to map,
completely characterize and finally to control femtosecond
nuclear motion in
simple molecules, (ii) to generate and observe ultra-fast electronic
wave-packets and, (iii) to study correlated sub-fs few-electron
dynamics in
strong-field multiple ionization. For that purpose, we have
developed a
unique combination of a `reaction microscope' spectrometer (with an
integrated Li-MOT target) imaging the complete many-particle
final-state
momentum space and a pump-probe setup providing two 7 fs, ca. 0.1
PW/cm**2
pulses at variable delays between 0 and 3300 fs, reaching
absolute and
relative precisions as good as 70 as and 1 as, respectively.
(i) Via Coulomb explosion imaging we reconstruct the time-dependent
probability density of the dissociating, rotating and vibrating
nuclear
wave-packets in the most fundamental molecular systems, the
hydrogen and
deuterium molecular ions. We observe the `collapse' and `revival'
of their
vibrational wave packets, investigate their composition via Fourier
analysis, show novel routes to directly visualize field modified
potential
curves yielding a complete characterization of the field-induced
ultra-fast
molecular dynamics and, most recently, study the formation of
hydrogen
molecular ions in laser-induced fragmentation of methane. A one
attosecond
relative accuracy is demonstrated mapping the vibrational motion
in the
neutral deuterium molecule and the corresponding excitation
mechanism is
identified by determination of the absolute quantum phase of the
motion.
(ii) Using a Li-MOT target as an effective one-electron target we
have
coherently populated and observed fast electronic wave packets in
low-lying
states. (iii) For multiple ionization of atoms recoil-ion momentum
distributions allow us to distinguish different ionization
pathways and to
reveal first time information on few-electron emission. For Ne we
observe
signatures of highly correlated recollision-induced three- and
four-electron
processes measured to occur on a 500 as time scale.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2008.DAMOP.Q1.1