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Resonance-enhanced multiphoton ionization in the x-ray regime

ORAL

Abstract

Multiphoton ionization is one of the fundamental nonlinear processes when matter interacts with intense laser fields. In particular, Resonance-enhanced multiphoton ionization (REMPI) has been a widely-used spectroscopic technique but has yet been extended to the x-ray regime since it requires entirely different physical processes and interpretation. Conventional REMPI relies on the resonant excitation of a valence electron where the only relaxation pathway is radiative decay. On the other hand, a core-excited state after x-ray resonant excitation is subject to Auger-Meitner decay, which is orders of magnitude faster than radiative decay. Thus, the complex interplay between ultrafast decay processes and REMPI renders this process challenging to fully resolve in the x-ray regime. We present a first observation of REMPI in the x-ray regime. We observe nonlinear ionization to create Ar17+, where photon energies are insufficient to directly ionize a 1s electron. With the aid of state-of-the-art theoretical modeling, we attribute the ionization to a two-color REMPI-like process where the second harmonic creates a 1s → 2p transition and the fundamental pulse subsequently ionizes the system. The measured resonance profile of x-ray REMPI shows a broad, asymmetric, red-shifted distribution, which is a clear distinction from the conventional REMPI case. Moreover, theoretical results demonstrate a strong pulse length dependence of the resonance profile. Our analysis shows that the REMPI process occurs not only for Ar16+ but also for lower charge states, where multiple ionization competes with Auger lifetimes. We find the observed broadband nature and pulse-length dependence of the resonance profile to be due to overlapping resonances with lower Ar charge states.

Publication: A.C. LaForge, S.-K. Son et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 127, 213202 (2021)

Presenters

  • Aaron C LaForge

    University of Connecticut

Authors

  • Aaron C LaForge

    University of Connecticut

  • Sang-Kil Son

    DESY CFEL

  • Debadarshini Mishra

    University of Connecticut

  • Markus Ilchen

    Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY, European XFEL, Holzkoppel 4, 22869 Schenefeld, Germany, DESY, Eu XFEL

  • Stephen Duncanson

    University of Connecticut

  • Eemeli Eronen

    University of Turku

  • Edwin Kukk

    University of Turku

  • Stanislaw Wirok-Stoletow

    DESY CFEL

  • Daria Kolbasova

    DESY CFEL

  • Peter Walter

    SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab, LCLS, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, Menlo Park, CA, USA

  • Rebecca Boll

    EuXFEL, Eu XFEL

  • Alberto De Fanis

    Eu XFEL

  • Michael Meyer

    European XFEL, EuXFEL, Eu XFEL

  • Yevheniy Ovcharenko

    Eu XFEL

  • Daniel Rivas

    EuXFEL, Eu XFEL

  • Phillip Schmidt

    Eu XFEL

  • Robin Santra

    DESY CFEL, DESY

  • Nora Berrah

    University of Connecticut