| Literature DB >> 24182264 |
Nora G Kling1, K J Betsch, M Zohrabi, S Zeng, F Anis, U Ablikim, Bethany Jochim, Z Wang, M Kübel, M F Kling, K D Carnes, B D Esry, I Ben-Itzhak.
Abstract
The dissociation of an H2+ molecular-ion beam by linearly polarized, carrier-envelope-phase-tagged 5 fs pulses at 4×10(14) W/cm2 with a central wavelength of 730 nm was studied using a coincidence 3D momentum imaging technique. Carrier-envelope-phase-dependent asymmetries in the emission direction of H+ fragments relative to the laser polarization were observed. These asymmetries are caused by interference of odd and even photon number pathways, where net zero-photon and one-photon interference predominantly contributes at H+ + H kinetic energy releases of 0.2-0.45 eV, and net two-photon and one-photon interference contributes at 1.65-1.9 eV. These measurements of the benchmark H2+ molecule offer the distinct advantage that they can be quantitatively compared with ab initio theory to confirm our understanding of strong-field coherent control via the carrier-envelope phase.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24182264 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.111.163004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Rev Lett ISSN: 0031-9007 Impact factor: 9.161