42nd Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
Volume 56, Number 5
Monday–Friday, June 13–17, 2011;
Atlanta, Georgia
Session C2: Ultrafast and Intense X-rays
2:00 PM–4:00 PM,
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Room: A602
Chair: Gilles Doumy, Argonne National Laboratory
Abstract ID: BAPS.2011.DAMOP.C2.1
Abstract: C2.00001 : Manipulating the motion of large molecules: Information from the molecular frame
2:00 PM–2:30 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Jochen K\"upper
(Center for Free-Electron Laser Science, DESY; University of Hamburg )
Large molecules have complex potential-energy surfaces with many
local minima. They exhibit multiple stereoisomers, even at the
low temperatures ($\sim$1 K) in a molecular beam, with rich
intra- and intermolecular dynamics. Over the last years, we have
developed methods to manipulate the motion of large, complex
molecules and to select their quantum states. We have exploited
this state-selectivity, for example, to spatially separate
individual structural isomers of complex molecules [1] and to
demonstrate unprecedented degrees of laser alignment and
mixed-field orientation of these molecules [2].
Such clean, well-defined samples strongly benefit, or simply
allow, novel experiments on the dynamics of complex molecules,
for instance, femtosecond pump-probe measurements, X-ray or
electron diffraction of molecular ensembles (including
diffraction-from-within experiments), or tomographic
reconstructions of molecular orbitals. These samples could also
be very advantageous for metrology applications, such as, for
example, matter-wave interferometry or the search for electroweak
interactions in chiral molecules. Moreover, they provide an
extreme level of control for stereo-dynamically controlled
reaction dynamics.
We have recently exploited these state-selected and oriented
samples to measure photoelectron angular distributions in the
molecular frame (MFPADs) from non-resonant femtosecond-laser
photoionization [3] and using the X-ray Free-Electron-Laser LCLS.
We have also investigated X-ray diffraction imaging and, using
ion momentum imaging, the induced radiation damage of these
samples using the LCLS.
This work was carried out within a collaboration for which J.
K\"upper, H. Chapman, and D. Rolles are spokespersons. The
collaboration consists of CFEL (DESY, MPG, University Hamburg),
Fritz-Haber-Institute Berlin, MPI Nuclear Physics Heidelberg, MPG
Semi-conductor Lab, Aarhus University, FOM AMOLF Amsterdam, Lund
University, MPI Medical Research Heidelberg, TU Berlin, Max Born
Institute Berlin, and SLAC Menlo Park, CA, USA. The experiments
were carried out using CAMP (designed and built by the MPG-ASG at
CFEL) [4] at the LCLS (operated by Stanford University on behalf
of the US DOE) [5].
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[1] Filsinger, Erlekam, von Helden, K\"upper, Meijer, Phys. Rev.
Lett. 100, 133003 (2008); Filsinger, K\"upper, Meijer, Hansen,
Maurer, Nielsen, Holmegaard, Stapelfeldt, Angew. Chem. Int. Ed.
48, 6900 (2009)\\[0pt]
[2] Holmegaard, Nielsen, Nevo, Stapelfeldt, Filsinger, K\"upper,
Meijer, Phys. Rev. Lett. 102, 023001 (2009); Filsinger, K\"upper,
Meijer, Holmegaard, Nielsen, Nevo, Hansen, Stapelfeldt, J. Chem.
Phys. 131, 064309, (2009); Nevo, Holmegaard, Nielsen, Hansen,
Stapelfeldt, Filsinger, Meijer, K\"upper, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys.
11, 9912 (2009)\\[0pt]
[3] Holmegaard, Hansen, Kalh{\o}j, Kragh, Stapelfeldt, Filsinger,
K\"upper, Meijer, Dimitrovski, Abu-samha, Martiny, Madsen, Nature
Phys. 6, 428 (2010)\\[0pt]
[4] Str\"uder et al. Nucl Instrum Meth A 614, 483 (2010)\\[0pt]
[5] Emma et al. Nat Photonics 4, 641 (2010)
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2011.DAMOP.C2.1