A plano-convex thick-lens velocity map imaging apparatus for direct, high resolution 3D momentum measurements of photoelectrons with ion time-of-flight coincidence
Since its inception, velocity map imaging (VMI) has been a powerful tool for measuring the 2D momentum distribution of photoelectrons generated by strong laser fields. There has been continued interest in expanding it into 3D measurements either through reconstructive or direct methods. Recently muc...
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Zusammenfassung: | Since its inception, velocity map imaging (VMI) has been a powerful tool for
measuring the 2D momentum distribution of photoelectrons generated by strong
laser fields. There has been continued interest in expanding it into 3D
measurements either through reconstructive or direct methods. Recently much
work has been devoted to the latter of these, particularly by relating the
electron time-of-flight (TOF) to the third momentum component. The technical
challenge here is having timing resolution sufficient to resolve structure in
the narrow (< 10 ns) electron TOF spread. Here we build upon work in the fields
of VMI lens design and 3D VMI measurement by using a plano-convex thick-lens
VMI in conjunction with an event-driven camera (TPX3CAM) providing TOF
information for high resolution 3D electron momentum measurements. We perform
simulations to show that, with the addition of a mesh electrode to the
thick-lens VMI geometry, a plano-convex electrostatic field is formed which
extends the detectable electron cutoff energy range while retaining high
resolution. Further, the thick-lens also extends the electron TOF range which
allows for better resolution of the momentum along this axis. We experimentally
demonstrate these capabilities by examining above-threshold ionization in Xenon
where the apparatus is shown to collect electrons of energy up to $\sim$7 eV
with a TOF spread of $\sim$30 ns, both of which are improvements on previous
work by factors of $\sim$1.4 and $\sim$3.75 respectively. Finally, the PCTL-VMI
is equipped with a coincident ion TOF spectrometer which is shown to
effectively extract unique 3D momentum distributions for different ionic
species within a gas mixture. These techniques have potential to lend
themselves to more advanced measurements, particularly involving systems where
the electron momentum distributions possess non-trivial symmetries and require
high resolution. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2209.11690 |