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      Photoelectron angular distributions from strong-field ionization of oriented molecules

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          Laser-induced electron tunneling and diffraction.

          Molecular structure is usually determined by measuring the diffraction pattern the molecule impresses on x-rays or electrons. We used a laser field to extract electrons from the molecule itself, accelerate them, and in some cases force them to recollide with and diffract from the parent ion, all within a fraction of a laser period. Here, we show that the momentum distribution of the extracted electron carries the fingerprint of the highest occupied molecular orbital, whereas the elastically scattered electrons reveal the position of the nuclear components of the molecule. Thus, in one comprehensive technology, the photoelectrons give detailed information about the electronic orbital and the position of the nuclei.
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            Time-resolved molecular frame dynamics of fixed-in-space CS2 molecules.

            Random orientation of molecules within a sample leads to blurred observations of chemical reactions studied from the laboratory perspective. Methods developed for the dynamic imaging of molecular structures and processes struggle with this, as measurements are optimally made in the molecular frame. We used laser alignment to transiently fix carbon disulfide molecules in space long enough to elucidate, in the molecular reference frame, details of ultrafast electronic-vibrational dynamics during a photochemical reaction. These three-dimensional photoelectron imaging results, combined with ongoing efforts in molecular alignment and orientation, presage a wide range of insights obtainable from time-resolved studies in the molecular frame.
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              Three dimensional alignment of molecules using elliptically polarized laser fields

              (2000)
              We demonstrate, theoretically and experimentally, that an intense, elliptically polarized, nonresonant laser field can simultaneously force all three axes of a molecule to align along given axes fixed in space, thus inhibiting the free rotation in all three Euler angles. Theoretically, the effect is illustrated through time dependent quantum mechanical calculations. Experimentally, 3, 4-dibromothiophene molecules are aligned with a nanosecond laser pulse. The alignment is probed by 2D ion imaging of the fragments from a 20 fs laser pulse induced Coulomb explosion.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Nature Physics
                Nature Phys
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                1745-2473
                1745-2481
                June 2010
                May 16 2010
                June 2010
                : 6
                : 6
                : 428-432
                Article
                10.1038/nphys1666
                abe4eff8-66a0-43d2-93ba-9dd722afc631
                © 2010

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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