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Channel coupling in molecular photoemission delays

ORAL

Abstract

Photoemission delays are a measurement of the phase distortion of an electronic wavepacket as it escapes a cationic potential during photoionization. Electron-electron and electron-nuclear interactions can couple multiple ionization channels, altering the measured photoionization phase and introducing a delay compared to the expected single channel photoemission time. As a result, photoemission delays are a sensitive probe of dynamic molecular phenomena that can be hard to detect with partial photoionization cross-sections. We study photoionization in both the XUV and X-ray regimes for several molecular targets that display different time dependent potential features, such as fast nuclear motion, shape resonance, and core-ionization. These diverse set of ionization phenomena result in channel coupling that we observe through the photoemission delay.

Presenters

  • Anna L Wang

    Stanford Univ

Authors

  • Anna L Wang

    Stanford Univ

  • Taran Driver

    SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab, Stanford PULSE Institute; LCLS, SLAC National Laboratory, SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab/Stanford PULSE Institute

  • Andrei Kamalov

    SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab

  • Philip H Bucksbaum

    Stanford Univ, Stanford PULSE Institute, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, 2575 Sand Hill Road, Menlo Park, CA 94025, USA, Stanford Univ; Stanford PULSE Institute

  • James P Cryan

    SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab, Stanford PULSE Institute; LCLS, SLAC National Laboratory, SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab/Stanford PULSE Institute, SLAC National Lab