X-ray Coulomb explosion imaging reveals role of molecular structure in internal conversion
Molecular photoabsorption results in an electronic excitation/ionization which couples to the rearrangement of the nuclei. The resulting intertwined change of nuclear and electronic degrees of freedom determines the conversion of photoenergy into other molecular energy forms. Nucleobases are excelle...
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Zusammenfassung: | Molecular photoabsorption results in an electronic excitation/ionization
which couples to the rearrangement of the nuclei. The resulting intertwined
change of nuclear and electronic degrees of freedom determines the conversion
of photoenergy into other molecular energy forms. Nucleobases are excellent
candidates for studying such dynamics, and great effort has been taken in the
past to observe the electronic changes induced by the initial excitation in a
time-resolved manner using ultrafast electron spectroscopy. The linked
geometrical changes during nucleobase photorelaxation have so far not been
observed directly in time-resolved experiments. Here, we present a study on a
thionucleobase, where we extract comprehensive information on the molecular
rearrangement using Coulomb explosion imaging. Our measurement links the
extracted deplanarization of the molecular geometry to the previously studied
temporal evolution of the electronic properties of the system. In particular,
the protons of the exploded molecule are well-suited messengers carrying rich
information on the molecule's geometry at distinct times after the initial
electronic excitation. The combination of ultrashort laser pulses to trigger
molecular dynamics, intense X-ray free-electron laser pulses for the explosion
of the molecule, and multi-particle coincidence detection opens new avenues for
time-resolved studies of complex molecules in the gas phase. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2405.15367 |