Bulletin of the American Physical Society
53rd Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
Volume 67, Number 7
Monday–Friday, May 30–June 3 2022; Orlando, Florida
Session C10: Focus Session: Atoms and Molecules in Strong Laser Fields
11:00 AM–1:00 PM,
Tuesday, May 31, 2022
Room: Grand Ballroom D
Chair: Eric Wells, Augustana Univ
Abstract: C10.00001 : Revealing the influence of molecular chirality on tunnel-ionization dynamics
11:00 AM–11:30 AM
Presenter:
Yann Mairesse
(CNRS - University of Bordeaux)
Authors:
Yann Mairesse
(CNRS - University of Bordeaux)
Etienne Bloch
(University of Bordeaux)
Sylvain Larroque
(University of Bordeaux)
Shaked Rozen
(Weizmann Institute of Science)
Samuel Beaulieu
(University of Bordeaux)
Antoine Comby
(University of Bordeaux)
Sandra Beauvarlet
(University of Bordeaux)
Dominique Descamps
(University of Bordeaux)
Baptiste Fabre
(University of Bordeaux)
Stéphane Petit
(University of Bordeaux)
Richard TAIEB
(Sorbonne Université)
Ayelet J. Uzan
(Weizmann Institute of Science)
Valérie Blanchet
(University of Bordeaux)
Nirit Dudovich
(Weizmann Institute of Science)
Bernard Pons
(University of Bordeaux)
We first implemented the attoclock technique, in which the released electrons are angularly streaked by the rotating laser field. We found that a strong forward-backward asymmetry in the electron yield is imprinted by chiral potential during the tunnel-ionization process. The subsequent scattering of the freed electron onto the chiral potential leads to an asymmetric angular streaking of the electron distribution. To access the phase of the tunneling wavepackets, we used photoelectron interferometry. We employed an orthogonally polarized two-color laser field whose optical chirality was manipulated on a sub-laser-cycle timescale. This scheme reveals that the combined action of the chiral potential and rotating laser field not only imprints asymmetric ionization amplitudes during the tunneling process, but also induces a forward-backward asymmetric phase profile onto the outgoing electron wave packets. Chiral light-matter interaction thus induces subtle angular-dependent shaping of both the amplitude and the phase of tunneling wave packets.
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