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Charging and Ion Ejection Dynamics of Large Helium Nanodroplets Exposed to Intense Femtosecond Soft X-Ray Pulses

ORAL

Abstract

Ion ejection from helium nanodroplets exposed to intense femtosecond soft x-ray pulses is studied via single-pulse ion time-of-flight (TOF) spectroscopy in coincidence with small-angle x-ray scattering. Scattering images encode droplet size and absolute photon flux incident on each droplet. Ion TOF spectra report on maximum ion kinetic energies (KE) of He+n=1-4 fragments. Measurements span HeN droplet sizes from N ≈ 107 to 1010 and droplet charges from ~9×10-5 to ~4×10-3 e/atom, spanning Coulomb explosion conditions to substantial frustration of outer ionization. The combination of absolute x-ray intensities, cluster sizes, and ion KE on an event-by-event basis reveals the correlations between ionization conditions and ejection dynamics of the fragments. The observed maximum He+ KE is compared to estimates of the maximum based on the cluster Coulomb potential resulting from unscreened ions and considering the impact of ion-atom collisions for ions emerging from within the cluster. The maximum He+ KE is found to be governed by Coulomb repulsion from unscreened cations across all expansion regimes. Findings are consistent with the emergence of a charged spherical shell around a quasi-neutral plasma core with increasing frustration.

Publication: This work is in preparation for submission to EPJ ST Special Issue: Intense laser-matter interaction in atoms, finite and condensed systems

Presenters

  • Catherine A Saladrigas

    University of California, Berkeley

Authors

  • Catherine A Saladrigas

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Alexandra J Feinberg

    Univ of Southern California

  • Michael Ziemkiewicz

    Lawrence Berkeley National Lab

  • Camila Bacellar

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Daniel M Neumark

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Christoph Bostedt

    Paul Scherrer Institute, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Paul Scherrer Institute

  • Andrey F Vilesov

    Univ of Southern California

  • Oliver Gessner

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory