| Literature DB >> 24953740 |
B K McFarland1, J P Farrell2, S Miyabe1, F Tarantelli3, A Aguilar4, N Berrah5, C Bostedt6, J D Bozek6, P H Bucksbaum2, J C Castagna6, R N Coffee6, J P Cryan2, L Fang7, R Feifel8, K J Gaffney1, J M Glownia2, T J Martinez9, M Mucke10, B Murphy7, A Natan1, T Osipov7, V S Petrović2, S Schorb6, Th Schultz11, L S Spector2, M Swiggers6, I Tenney2, S Wang2, J L White2, W White6, M Gühr1.
Abstract
Molecules can efficiently and selectively convert light energy into other degrees of freedom. Disentangling the underlying ultrafast motion of electrons and nuclei of the photoexcited molecule presents a challenge to current spectroscopic approaches. Here we explore the photoexcited dynamics of molecules by an interaction with an ultrafast X-ray pulse creating a highly localized core hole that decays via Auger emission. We discover that the Auger spectrum as a function of photoexcitation--X-ray-probe delay contains valuable information about the nuclear and electronic degrees of freedom from an element-specific point of view. For the nucleobase thymine, the oxygen Auger spectrum shifts towards high kinetic energies, resulting from a particular C-O bond stretch in the ππ* photoexcited state. A subsequent shift of the Auger spectrum towards lower kinetic energies displays the electronic relaxation of the initial photoexcited state within 200 fs. Ab-initio simulations reinforce our interpretation and indicate an electronic decay to the nπ* state.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24953740 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms5235
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919