Diffraction patterns in attosecond photoionization time delay
Upon absorbing a photon, the ionized electron sails through the target force field in attoseconds to reach free space. This navigation probes details of the potential landscape that get imprinted into the phase of the ionization amplitude. The Eisenbud-Wigner-Smith (EWS) time delay, the energy deriv...
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Zusammenfassung: | Upon absorbing a photon, the ionized electron sails through the target force
field in attoseconds to reach free space. This navigation probes details of the
potential landscape that get imprinted into the phase of the ionization
amplitude. The Eisenbud-Wigner-Smith (EWS) time delay, the energy derivative of
this phase, provides the navigation time relative to the time of the electron's
``free'' exit. This time is influenced by the diffraction of the electron from
the potential landscape, offering structural and dynamical information about
interactions. If the potential has an intrinsic symmetry, a regular pattern in
the time delay, including subpatterns of delays and advances, may occur from
the diffraction process. The recent synthesis of a polyhedral fluorocarbon
instigates the current study of photoionization from a cubic molecule. Our
simulation of the EWS delay unravels rich diffraction motifs within $\pm$100
attoseconds in both energy and angular distributions. Averaging over the Euler
angles from the laboratory to the molecular frame and over the photoelectron
azimuthal direction indicates that the pattern should be discernible in
ultrafast chronoscopy. The study benchmarks diffraction in molecular
photoionization as a fundamental process which can be experimentally accessed
through ultrafast time delay. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2412.08204 |