APS March Meeting 2011
Volume 56, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 21–25, 2011;
Dallas, Texas
Session A38: Focus Session: Ultrafast Dynamics and Imaging I
8:00 AM–10:24 AM,
Monday, March 21, 2011
Room: A130/131
Sponsoring
Unit:
DCP
Chair: Markus Guehr, Stanford University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2011.MAR.A38.5
Abstract: A38.00005 : Probing electron correlations by laser-induced tunnel ionization
9:36 AM–10:12 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Andr\'e Staudte
(National Research Council of Canada)
Pairwise electron correlation has been intensely studied by
projecting two
electrons to the continuum simultaneously via a well controlled
perturbation, e.g. a collision with an energetic electron, a fast
ion or a
single XUV photon. Electron correlation studies using multiphoton
ionization
remain an exception. One reason may be that recollision aside,
studies in
rare gas atoms have largely suggested that multiphoton multiple
ionization
in the tunneling limit proceeds sequentially - each successive
ionization
stage loosing memory of previous electronic correlations. On the
other hand,
laser tunnel ionization has been known to access multiple
electronic states.
Recent evidence, corroborating the notion that tunneling can
prepare these
correlated multielectron states in a coherent superposition,
suggests that
sequential multiple ionization may provide insight into dynamical
correlations in the parent ion.
Here, we demonstrate how dynamics of electron correlation can be
investigated using laser-induced tunnel ionization by
interrogating valence
shell electrons in rare gas atoms with intense laser pulses. We
find a
strong spatial propensity in the sequential double tunnel
ionization regime.
For instantaneous emission, we find that the two electrons are
preferentially emitted in perpendicular directions. Applying
laser scanning
tunneling microscopy in a pump-probe scheme we directly observe
the periodic
charge redistribution in the valence shell of singly charged
noble gas atoms
that was predicted by Santra and coworkers and recently inferred
in an
attosecond pump-probe experiment using XUV probe pulses.
In contrast to single photon ionization, tunneling is highly
directional.
Here, we exploit that property of tunnel ionization to remove an
electron
from a rare gas atom along a specific spatial direction. We then
probe the
correlation by ionizing a second electron via a laser-induced
tunneling
gate. Since our tunneling gates are optically controlled, the
second gate
can be opened at any angle and at any time relative to the first.
Hence, not
only spatial but also temporal variations of the correlation can
be probed.
We demonstrate the generality of this concept by extending our
measurements
to a small molecule (HCl).
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2011.MAR.A38.5