Atomic And Molecular Clusters Latest Preprints | 2019-07-05

in #atomicphysics5 years ago

Atomic And Molecular Clusters


Reexamination of Tolman's law and the Gibbs adsorption equation for curved interfaces (1703.08719v2)

Martin Thomas Horsch, Stefan Becker, Michaela Heier, Jayant Kumar Singh, Felix Diewald, Ralf Müller, George Jackson, Jadran Vrabec, Hans Hasse

2017-03-25

In manuscript arXiv:1703.08719 [cond-mat.soft], it was claimed that the well-known deduction of Tolman's law is not rigorous, since Tolman's argument implies that two different definitions of the surface tension, called and in the manuscript, coincide. This claim is retracted as it can be shown by free-energy minimization that indeed holds for the Laplace radius. Joachim Gro\ss, Philipp Rehner, Carlos Vega, \O{}ivind Wilhelmsen, and the anonymous reviewers of The Journal of Chemical Physics contributed to finding the mistake in the manuscript.

Molecular size effects on diffraction resonances in positronium formation from fullerenes (1907.01900v1)

Paul-Antoine Hervieux, Anzumaan R. Chakraborty, Himadri S. Chakraborty

2019-07-01

We previously predicted [P.A. Hervieux et al., Phys. Rev. A \textbf{95}, 020701 (2017)] that owing to predominant electron capture by incoming positrons from the molecular shell, C acts like a spherical diffractor inducing resonances in the positronium (Ps) formation as a function of the positron impact energy. By extending the study for a larger C fullerene target, we now demonstrate that the diffraction resonances compactify in energy in analogy with the shrinking fringe separation for larger slit size in classical single-slit experiment. The result brings further impetus for conducting Ps spectroscopic experiments with fullerene targets, including target- and/or captured-level differential measurements. The ground states of the fullerenes are modeled in a spherical jellium frame of the local density approximation (LDA) method with the exchange-correlation functional based on the van Leeuween and Baerends (LB94) model potential, while the positron impact and Ps formation are treated in the continuum distorted-wave final state (CDW-FS) approximation.

Far-from-equilibrium dynamics of angular momentum in a quantum many-particle system (1906.12238v1)

Igor N. Cherepanov, Giacomo Bighin, Lars Christiansen, Anders Vestergaard Jørgensen, Richard Schmidt, Henrik Stapelfeldt, Mikhail Lemeshko

2019-06-28

We use laser-induced rotation of single molecules embedded in superfluid helium nanodroplets to reveal angular momentum dynamics and transfer in a controlled setting, under far-from-equilibrium conditions. As an unexpected result, we observe pronounced oscillations of time-dependent molecular alignment that have no counterpart in gas-phase molecules. Angulon theory reveals that these oscillations originate from the unique rotational structure of molecules in He droplets and quantum-state-specific transfer of rotational angular momentum to the many-body He environment on picosecond timescales. Our results pave the way to understanding collective effects of macroscopic angular momentum exchange in solid state systems in a bottom-up fashion.

Controlling Sub-Cycle Optical Chirality in the Photoionization of Chiral Molecules (1906.11325v2)

Shaked Rozen, Antoine Comby, Etienne Bloch, Sandra Beauvarlet, Dominique Descamps, Baptiste Fabre, Stephane Petit, Valerie Blanchet, Bernard Pons, Nirit Dudovich, Yann Mairesse

2019-06-26

Controlling the polarization state of electromagnetic radiation enables the investigation of fundamental symmetry properties of matter through chiroptical processes. Many strategies have been developed to reveal structural or dynamical information about chiral molecules, from the microwave to the extreme ultraviolet range. Most schemes employ circularly or elliptically polarized radiation, and more sophisticated configurations involve, for instance, light pulses with time-varying polarization states. In all these schemes, the polarization state of light is always considered as constant over one optical cycle. In this study, we zoom into the optical cycle in order to resolve and control a subcyle attosecond chiroptical process. We engineer an electric field whose instantaneous chirality can be controlled within the optical cycle, by combining two phase-locked orthogonally polarized fundamental and second harmonic fields. While the composite field has zero net ellipticity, it shows an instantaneous optical chirality which can be controlled via the two-color delay. We theoretically and experimentally investigate the photoionization of chiral molecules with this controlled chiral field. We find that electrons are preferentially ejected forward or backward relative to the laser propagation direction depending on the molecular handedness, similarly to the well-established photoelectron circular dichroism process. However, since the instantaneous chirality switches sign from one half cycle to the next, electrons ionized from two consecutive half cycles of the laser show opposite forward/backward asymmetries. This chiral signal provides a unique insight into the influence of instantaneous chirality in the dynamical photoionization process. Our results demonstrate the important role of sub-cycle polarization shaping of electric fields, as a new route to study and manipulate chiroptical processes.

Interactions of benzene, naphthalene, and azulene with alkali-metal and alkaline-earth-metal atoms for ultracold studies (1903.01378v2)

Paweł Wójcik, Tatiana Korona, Michał Tomza

2019-03-04

We consider collisional properties of polyatomic aromatic hydrocarbon molecules immersed into ultracold atomic gases and investigate intermolecular interactions of exemplary benzene, naphthalene, and azulene with alkali-metal (Li, Na, K, Rb, Cs) and alkaline-earth-metal (Mg, Ca, Sr, Ba) atoms. We apply the state-of-the-art \textit{ab initio} techniques to compute the potential energy surfaces (PESs). We use the coupled cluster method restricted to single, double, and noniterative triple excitations to reproduce the correlation energy and the small-core energy-consistent pseudopotentials to model the scalar relativistic effects in heavier metal atoms. We also report the leading long-range isotropic and anisotropic dispersion and induction interaction coefficients. The PESs are characterized in detail and the nature of intermolecular interactions is analyzed and benchmarked using symmetry-adapted perturbation theory. The full three-dimensional PESs are provided for selected systems within the atom-bond pairwise additive representation and can be employed in scattering calculations. Presented study of the electronic structure is the first step towards the evaluation of prospects for sympathetic cooling of polyatomic aromatic molecules with ultracold atoms. We suggest azulene, an isomer of naphthalene which possesses a significant permanent electric dipole moment and optical transitions in the visible range, as a promising candidate for electric field manipulation and buffer-gas or sympathetic cooling.

Tracking Attosecond Electronic Coherences Using Phase-Manipulated Extreme Ultraviolet Pulses (1906.07112v2)

Andreas Wituschek, Lukas Bruder, Enrico Allaria, Ulrich Bangert, Marcel Binz, Carlo Callegari, Giulio Cerullo, Paolo Cinquegrana, Luca Gianessi, Miltcho Danailov, Alexander Demidovich, Michele Di Fraia, Marcel Drabbels, Raimund Feifel, Tim Laarmann, Rupert Michiels, Najmeh Sadat Mirian, Marcel Mudrich, Ivaylo Nikolov, Finn H. O'Shea, Giuseppe Penco, Paolo Piseri, Oksana Plekan, Kevin Charles Prince, Andreas Przystawik, Primož Rebernik Ribič, Giuseppe Sansone, Paolo Sigalotti, Simone Spampinati, Carlo Spezzani, Richard James Squibb, Stefano Stranges, Daniel Uhl, Frank Stienkemeier

2019-06-17

The recent development of novel extreme ultraviolet (XUV) coherent light sources bears great potential for a better understanding of the structure and dynamics of matter. Promising routes are advanced coherent control and nonlinear spectroscopy schemes in the XUV energy range, yielding unprecedented spatial and temporal resolution. However, their implementation has been hampered by the experimental challenge of generating XUV pulse sequences with precisely controlled timing and phase properties. In particular, direct control and manipulation of the phase of individual pulses within a XUV pulse sequence opens exciting new possibilities for coherent control and multidimensional spectroscopy schemes, but has not been accomplished. Here, we overcome these constraints in a highly time-stabilized and phase-modulated XUV-pump, XUV-probe experiment which directly probes the evolution and dephasing of an inner subshell electronic coherence. This new approach, avoiding any XUV optics for direct pulse manipulation, opens up extensive applications of advanced nonlinear optics and spectroscopy at XUV wavelengths.

Recovery of high-energy photoelectron circular dichroism through Fano interference (1906.10550v1)

G. Hartmann, M. Ilchen, Ph. Schmidt, C. Küstner-Wetekam, C. Ozga, F. Scholz, J. Buck, F. Trinter, J. Viefhaus, A. Ehresmann, M. S. Schöffler, A. Knie, Ph. V. Demekhin

2019-06-25

It is commonly accepted that the magnitude of a photoelectron circular dichroism (PECD) is governed by the ability of an outgoing photoelectron wave packet to probe the chiral asymmetry of a molecule. To be able to accumulate this characteristic asymmetry while escaping the chiral ion, photoelectrons need to have relatively small kinetic energies of up to a few tens of electron volts. Here, we demonstrate a substantial PECD for very fast photoelectrons above 500 eV kinetic energy released from methyloxirane by a participator resonant Auger decay of its lowermost O -excitation. This effect emerges as a result of the Fano interference between the direct and resonant photoionization pathways, notwithstanding that their individual effects are negligibly small. The resulting dichroic parameter has an anomalous dispersion, i.e. it changes its sign across the resonance, which can be considered as an analogue of the Cotton effect in the X-ray regime.

Deep neural networks for classifying complex features in diffraction images (1903.02779v4)

Julian Zimmermann, Bruno Langbehn, Riccardo Cucini, Michele Di Fraia, Paola Finetti, Aaron C. LaForge, Toshiyuki Nishiyama, Yevheniy Ovcharenko, Paolo Piseri, Oksana Plekan, Kevin C. Prince, Frank Stienkemeier, Kiyoshi Ueda, Carlo Callegari, Thomas Möller, Daniela Rupp

2019-03-07

Intense short-wavelength pulses from free-electron lasers and high-harmonic-generation sources enable diffractive imaging of individual nano-sized objects with a single x-ray laser shot. The enormous data sets with up to several million diffraction patterns represent a severe problem for data analysis, due to the high dimensionality of imaging data. Feature recognition and selection is a crucial step to reduce the dimensionality. Usually, custom-made algorithms are developed at a considerable effort to approximate the particular features connected to an individual specimen, but facing different experimental conditions, these approaches do not generalize well. On the other hand, deep neural networks are the principal instrument for today's revolution in automated image recognition, a development that has not been adapted to its full potential for data analysis in science. We recently published in Langbehn et al. (Phys. Rev. Lett. 121, 255301 (2018)) the first application of a deep neural network as a feature extractor for wide-angle diffraction images of helium nanodroplets. Here we present the setup, our modifications and the training process of the deep neural network for diffraction image classification and its systematic benchmarking. We find that deep neural networks significantly outperform previous attempts for sorting and classifying complex diffraction patterns and are a significant improvement for the much-needed assistance during post-processing of large amounts of experimental coherent diffraction imaging data.

Relaxation dynamics and genuine properties of the solvated electron in neutral water clusters (1906.08767v2)

Thomas E. Gartmann, Loren Ban, Bruce L. Yoder, Sebastian Hartweg, Egor Chasovskikh, Ruth Signorell

2019-06-20

We have investigated the solvation dynamics and the genuine binding energy and photoemission anisotropy of the solvated electron in neutral water clusters with a combination of time-resolved photoelectron velocity map imaging and electron scattering simulations. The dynamics was probed with a UV probe pulse following above-band-gap excitation with a EUV pump pulse. The solvation dynamics is completed within about 2 ps. Data analysis with an electron scattering model for the ground-state hydrated electron reveals a genuine binding energy in the range of 3.55-3.85 eV and a genuine anisotropy parameter in the range of 0.51-0.66. These genuine cluster values agree well with corresponding experimental and theoretical values for the liquid suggesting similar properties of the solvated electron in liquid water and large neutral water clusters.

Fast reconstruction of single-shot wide-angle diffraction images through deep learning (1906.06883v1)

Thomas Stielow, Robin Schmidt, Christian Peltz, Thomas Fennel, Stefan Scheel

2019-06-17

Single-shot X-ray imaging of short-lived nanostructures such as clusters and nanoparticles near a phase transition or non-crystalizing objects such as large proteins and viruses is currently the most elegant method for characterizing their structure. Using hard X-ray radiation provides scattering images that encode two-dimensional projections, which can be combined to identify the full three-dimensional object structure from multiple identical samples. Wide-angle scattering using XUV or soft X-rays, despite yielding lower resolution, provides three-dimensional structural information in a single shot and has opened routes towards the characterization of non-reproducible objects in the gas phase. The retrieval of the structural information contained in wide-angle scattering images is highly non-trivial, and currently no efficient algorithm is known. Here we show that deep learning networks, trained with simulated scattering data, allow for fast and accurate reconstruction of shape and orientation of nanoparticles from experimental images. The gain in speed compared to conventional retrieval techniques opens the route for automated structure reconstruction algorithms capable of real-time discrimination and pre-identification of nanostructures in scattering experiments with high repetition rate -- thus representing the enabling technology for fast femtosecond nanocrystallography.



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