Homodyne High-harmonic Spectroscopy: Coherent Imaging of a Unimolecular Chemical Reaction

At the heart of high harmonic generation lies a combination of optical and collision physics entwined by a strong laser field. An electron, initially tunnel-ionized by the field, driven away then back in the continuum, finally recombines back to rest in its initial ground state via a radiative tra...

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Main Author: Beaudoin Bertrand, Julien
Other Authors: Corkum, Paul
Language:en
Published: Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/23173
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-5931
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spelling ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-231732018-01-05T19:01:19Z Homodyne High-harmonic Spectroscopy: Coherent Imaging of a Unimolecular Chemical Reaction Beaudoin Bertrand, Julien Corkum, Paul Chemical Dynamics Imaging Attosecond Science High Harmonic Generation Coherent Detection Molecular Photonics Ultrafast Lasers Ultrafast Molecular Imaging Molecular Photodissociation At the heart of high harmonic generation lies a combination of optical and collision physics entwined by a strong laser field. An electron, initially tunnel-ionized by the field, driven away then back in the continuum, finally recombines back to rest in its initial ground state via a radiative transition. The emitted attosecond (atto=10^-18) XUV light pulse carries all the information (polarization, amplitude and phase) about the photorecombination continuum-to-ground transition dipolar field. Photorecombination is related to the time-reversed photoionization process. In this perspective, high-harmonic spectroscopy extends well-established photoelectron spectroscopy, based on charged particle detection, to a fully coherent one, based on light characterization. The main achievement presented in this thesis is to use high harmonic generation to probe femtosecond (femto=10^-15) chemical dynamics for the first time. Thanks to the coherence imposed by the strong driving laser field, homodyne detection of attosecond pulses from excited molecules undergoing dynamics is achieved, the signal from unexcited molecules acting as the reference local oscillator. First, applying time-resolved high-harmonic spectroscopy to the photodissociation of a diatomic molecule, Br2 to Br + Br, allows us to follow the break of a chemical bond occurring in a few hundreds of femtoseconds. Second, extending it to a triatomic (NO2) lets us observe both the previously unseen (but predicted) early femtosecond conical intersection dynamics followed by the late picosecond statistical photodissociation taking place in the reaction NO2 to NO + O. Another important realization of this thesis is the development of a complementary technique to time-resolved high-harmonic spectroscopy called LAPIN, for Linked Attosecond Phase INterferometry. When combined together, time-resolved high-harmonic spectroscopy and LAPIN give access to the complex photorecombination dipole of aligned excited molecules. These achievements lay the basis for electron recollision tomographic imaging of a chemical reaction with unprecedented angstrom (1 angstrom= 0.1 nanometer) spatial resolution. Other contributions dedicated to the development of attosecond science and the generalization of high-harmonic spectroscopy as a novel, fully coherent molecular spectroscopy will also be presented in this thesis. 2012-08-21T09:30:05Z 2012-08-21T09:30:05Z 2012 2012 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10393/23173 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-5931 en Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Chemical Dynamics Imaging
Attosecond Science
High Harmonic Generation
Coherent Detection
Molecular Photonics
Ultrafast Lasers
Ultrafast Molecular Imaging
Molecular Photodissociation
spellingShingle Chemical Dynamics Imaging
Attosecond Science
High Harmonic Generation
Coherent Detection
Molecular Photonics
Ultrafast Lasers
Ultrafast Molecular Imaging
Molecular Photodissociation
Beaudoin Bertrand, Julien
Homodyne High-harmonic Spectroscopy: Coherent Imaging of a Unimolecular Chemical Reaction
description At the heart of high harmonic generation lies a combination of optical and collision physics entwined by a strong laser field. An electron, initially tunnel-ionized by the field, driven away then back in the continuum, finally recombines back to rest in its initial ground state via a radiative transition. The emitted attosecond (atto=10^-18) XUV light pulse carries all the information (polarization, amplitude and phase) about the photorecombination continuum-to-ground transition dipolar field. Photorecombination is related to the time-reversed photoionization process. In this perspective, high-harmonic spectroscopy extends well-established photoelectron spectroscopy, based on charged particle detection, to a fully coherent one, based on light characterization. The main achievement presented in this thesis is to use high harmonic generation to probe femtosecond (femto=10^-15) chemical dynamics for the first time. Thanks to the coherence imposed by the strong driving laser field, homodyne detection of attosecond pulses from excited molecules undergoing dynamics is achieved, the signal from unexcited molecules acting as the reference local oscillator. First, applying time-resolved high-harmonic spectroscopy to the photodissociation of a diatomic molecule, Br2 to Br + Br, allows us to follow the break of a chemical bond occurring in a few hundreds of femtoseconds. Second, extending it to a triatomic (NO2) lets us observe both the previously unseen (but predicted) early femtosecond conical intersection dynamics followed by the late picosecond statistical photodissociation taking place in the reaction NO2 to NO + O. Another important realization of this thesis is the development of a complementary technique to time-resolved high-harmonic spectroscopy called LAPIN, for Linked Attosecond Phase INterferometry. When combined together, time-resolved high-harmonic spectroscopy and LAPIN give access to the complex photorecombination dipole of aligned excited molecules. These achievements lay the basis for electron recollision tomographic imaging of a chemical reaction with unprecedented angstrom (1 angstrom= 0.1 nanometer) spatial resolution. Other contributions dedicated to the development of attosecond science and the generalization of high-harmonic spectroscopy as a novel, fully coherent molecular spectroscopy will also be presented in this thesis.
author2 Corkum, Paul
author_facet Corkum, Paul
Beaudoin Bertrand, Julien
author Beaudoin Bertrand, Julien
author_sort Beaudoin Bertrand, Julien
title Homodyne High-harmonic Spectroscopy: Coherent Imaging of a Unimolecular Chemical Reaction
title_short Homodyne High-harmonic Spectroscopy: Coherent Imaging of a Unimolecular Chemical Reaction
title_full Homodyne High-harmonic Spectroscopy: Coherent Imaging of a Unimolecular Chemical Reaction
title_fullStr Homodyne High-harmonic Spectroscopy: Coherent Imaging of a Unimolecular Chemical Reaction
title_full_unstemmed Homodyne High-harmonic Spectroscopy: Coherent Imaging of a Unimolecular Chemical Reaction
title_sort homodyne high-harmonic spectroscopy: coherent imaging of a unimolecular chemical reaction
publisher Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/23173
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-5931
work_keys_str_mv AT beaudoinbertrandjulien homodynehighharmonicspectroscopycoherentimagingofaunimolecularchemicalreaction
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