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Time-resolved study of ICD in Ne dimers using FEL radiation

Authors :
Thomas Pfeifer
Yuhai Jiang
Tatiana Marchenko
S. Mondal
Daniel Rolles
Artem Rudenko
R. Moshammer
Kristina Meyer
Sven Augustin
Günter Brenner
Denis Anielski
Arne Senftleben
S. Scheit
C. D. Schröter
Rebecca Boll
A. Broska
Kiyoshi Ueda
Marc Simon
Tetsuya Tachibana
Vitali Averbukh
Joachim Ullrich
M. Kurka
Lutz Foucar
Gerhard Schmid
Matthias Kübel
Matthias F. Kling
Kirsten Schnorr
Rolf Treusch
Source :
Journal of Electron Spectroscopy and Related Phenomena. 204:245-256
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2015.

Abstract

Interatomic Coulombic Decay (ICD) is a relaxation phenomenon, which takes place in weakly bound atomic and molecular systems, typically within a few to hundreds of femtoseconds depending on the system and the particular decay mechanism. The creation of ICD-active states requires the production of highly excited systems, usually populated by innershell ionization or excitation. To this end, XUV and X-ray radiation from synchrotrons was conventionally applied for the majority of experiments due to the desired state-selective ionization of certain sub-shells. The advent of Free-Electron Lasers (FELs) has enabled an entirely new class of experiments, which finally allow to trace ICD directly in the time domain due to the femtosecond pulse duration. Within this paper, the first time-resolved ICD measurement using an XUV-pump–XUV-probe scheme will be discussed in detail. The experiment was performed on neon dimers and ICD was triggered by removing a 2s electron from one of the neon atoms using a 58 eV pulse from the FEL in Hamburg (FLASH). The onset of ICD was probed with a delayed copy of the trigger pulse that further ionized one of the two Ne+ ions emerging after ICD. Thus, the delay-dependent yield of coincident Ne+ + Ne2+ ion pairs contains the lifetime of the 2s-innershell vacancy decaying via ICD. The result of 150 fs ± 50 fs is in good agreement with theory but only for those calculations that explicitly take nuclear motion into account.

Details

ISSN :
03682048
Volume :
204
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Electron Spectroscopy and Related Phenomena
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....feab6bb2c69816393d8b9128609cf497
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.elspec.2015.07.009