40th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
Volume 54, Number 7
Tuesday–Saturday, May 19–23, 2009;
Charlottesville, Virginia
Session Q6: Ultra-Fast Probing of Molecular Wave Functions
8:00 AM–10:00 AM,
Friday, May 22, 2009
Minor Hall
Room: 125
Chair: Tom Weinacht, SUNY Stony Brook
Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.DAMOP.Q6.1
Abstract: Q6.00001 : Time and Space Resolved High Harmonic Imaging of Electron Tunnelling from Molecules
8:00 AM–8:30 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
O. Smirnova
(Max-Born-Institute, Max-Born-Str. 2A, 12489 Berlin, Germany)
High harmonic generation in intense laser fields carries the
promise of combining sub-Angstrom spatial and attosecond temporal
resolution of electronic structures and dynamics in molecules, see
e.g. [1-3]. High harmonic emission occurs when
an electron detached from a molecule by an intense laser field
recombines with the parent ion [4]. Similar to Young's
double-slit experiment, recombination to several ``lobes'' of the
same molecular orbital can produce interference minima and maxima
in harmonic intensities [1]. These minima (maxima) carry
structural information -- they occur when the de-Broglie
wavelength of the recombining electron matches distances between
the centers. We demonstrate both theoretically and experimentally
that amplitude minima (maxima) in the harmonic spectra can also
have dynamical origin, reflecting multi-electron dynamics in the
molecule. We use high harmonic spectra to record this dynamics and
reconstruct the position of the hole left in the molecule after
ionization. Experimental data are consistent with the hole
starting in different places as the ionization dynamics changes
from tunnelling to the multi-photon regime. Importantly, hole
localization and subsequent attosecond dynamics are induced even
in the tunnelling limit. Thus, even ``static'' tunnelling induced
by a tip of a tunnelling microscope will generate similar
attosecond dynamics in a sample. We anticipate that our approach
will become standard in disentangling spatial and temporal
information from high harmonic spectra of molecules.\\[4pt]
In collaboration with Serguei Patchkovskii, National Research
Council, 100 Sussex Drive, Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0R6, Canada; Yann
Mairesse, NRC Canada and CELIA, Universit\'e Bordeaux I, UMR 5107
(CNRS, Bordeaux 1, CEA), 351 Cours de la Lib\'eration, 33405
Talence Cedex, France; Nirit Dudovich, NRC Canada and Department
of Physics of Complex Systems, Weizmann Institute of Science,
Rehovot 76100, Israel; David Villeneuve, Paul Corkum, NRC Canada;
and Misha Yu. Ivanov, NRC Canada and Imperial College of Science,
Technology and Medicine, London SW7 2BW, United Kingdom.
\\[4pt]
[1] Lein, M., \emph{et al}. \emph{Phys. Rev. Lett.} {\bf 88},
183903 (2002).\\[0pt]
[2] Itatani, J. \emph{et al}. \emph{Nature} {\bf 432}, 834
(2004).\\[0pt]
[3] Baker, S. \emph{et al} Science {\bf 312}, 424 (2006).\\[0pt]
[4] Corkum, P. B.\emph{Phys. Rev. Lett.} {\bf 71},
1994 (1993).
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2009.DAMOP.Q6.1