| Literature DB >> 33436816 |
Xiang Li1,2, Ludger Inhester3,4, Timur Osipov5, Rebecca Boll6, Ryan Coffee5,7, James Cryan5,7, Ave Gatton5, Tais Gorkhover4,7,8, Gregor Hartman9, Markus Ilchen6,9, André Knie9, Ming-Fu Lin5, Michael P Minitti5, Clemens Weninger5, Thomas J A Wolf7, Sang-Kil Son3,4, Robin Santra3,4,8, Daniel Rolles10, Artem Rudenko10, Peter Walter11.
Abstract
Molecules can sequentially absorb multiple photons when irradiated by an intense X-ray pulse from a free-electron laser. If the time delay between two photoabsorption events can be determined, this enables pump-probe experiments with a single X-ray pulse, where the absorption of the first photon induces electronic and nuclear dynamics that are probed by the absorption of the second photon. Here we show a realization of such a single-pulse X-ray pump-probe scheme on N[Formula: see text] molecules, using the X-ray induced dissociation process as an internal clock that is read out via coincident detection of photoelectrons and fragment ions. By coincidence analysis of the kinetic energies of the ionic fragments and photoelectrons, the transition from a bound molecular dication to two isolated atomic ions is observed through the energy shift of the inner-shell electrons. Via ab-initio simulations, we are able to map characteristic features in the kinetic energy release and photoelectron spectrum to specific delay times between photoabsorptions. In contrast to previous studies where nuclear motions were typically revealed by measuring ion kinetics, our work shows that inner-shell photoelectron energies can also be sensitive probes of nuclear dynamics, which adds one more dimension to the study of light-matter interactions with X-ray pulses.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33436816 PMCID: PMC7804145 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-79818-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379