Bond-length dependence of attosecond ionization delays in O2 arising from electron correlation to a shape resonance. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • We experimentally and theoretically demonstrate that electron correlation can cause the bond-length sensitivity of a shape resonance to induce an unexpected vibrational state-dependent ionization delay in a nonresonant channel. This discovery was enabled by a high-resolution attosecond-interferometry experiment based on a 400-nm driving and dressing wavelength. The short-wavelength driver results in a 6.2-electron volt separation between harmonics, markedly reducing the spectral overlap in the measured interferogram. We demonstrate the promise of this method on O2, a system characterized by broad vibrational progressions and a dense photoelectron spectrum. We measure a 40-attosecond variation of the photoionization delays over the X2g vibrational progression. Multichannel calculations show that this variation originates from a strong bond-length dependence of the energetic position of a shape resonance in the [Formula: see text] channel, which translates to the observed effects through electron correlation. The unprecedented energy resolution and delay accuracies demonstrate the promise of visible-light-driven molecular attosecond interferometry.

published proceedings

  • Sci Adv

altmetric score

  • 1

author list (cited authors)

  • Hammerland, D., Berglitsch, T., Zhang, P., Luu, T. T., Ueda, K., Lucchese, R. R., & Wrner, H. J.

citation count

  • 0

complete list of authors

  • Hammerland, Daniel||Berglitsch, Thomas||Zhang, Pengju||Luu, Tran Trung||Ueda, Kiyoshi||Lucchese, Robert R||Wörner, Hans Jakob

publication date

  • March 2024