Nuclear Motion in Water Ionized by 5-fs Strong Fields

POSTER

Abstract

Strong-field (multiple) ionization (SFI) experiments on molecules with small moments of inertia, such as water, have demonstrated that the large field strengths required for SFI can heavily modify the momenta of ionic fragments during the dissociation that follows multiple ionization. This has a profound effect on final state properties, such as the species, angular distribution, and kinetic energy of the fragments. We recently demonstrated that dynamic alignment and unbending are two dominant effects in the SFI of water for ionizing pulse durations of 40 fs (at 800 nm and 600 TW/cm2). These effects are significantly suppressed for ionizing pulse durations of 10 fs (at 780 nm and 400 TW/cm2). Here we show that dynamic rearrangement of molecular nuclei still occurs for pulse durations shorter than 10 fs. We compare the full three-dimensional fragment momentum distributions of multiply charged two- and three-body dissociations of H2O, D2O, and HOD for pulse durations from 5 fs to 20 fs, noting the changes in each molecule’s bend-angle and alignment with respect to the polarization and the redistribution of population between various decay channels.

*A.J.H., M.B., N.P., and P.H.B. were supported by the National Science Foundation. A.J.H. was additionally supported under a Stanford Graduate Fellowship as the 2019 Albion Walter Hewlett Fellow. N.P. was additionally supported by the Hertz Foundation. R.F. was supported by the Department of Energy Office of Basic Energy Science, Facilities Division.

Presenters

  • Andrew J Howard

    • Stanford Univ

Authors

  • Andrew J Howard

    • Stanford Univ
  • Mathew Britton

    • Univ of Ottawa
  • Ruaridh Forbes

    • SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab
    • Stanford PULSE Institute, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, 2575 Sand Hill Road, Menlo Park, CA 94025, USA
  • Nolan Peard

    • Stanford University
    • Stanford Univ
  • Philip H Bucksbaum

    • Stanford Univ
    • Stanford PULSE Institute, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, 2575 Sand Hill Road, Menlo Park, CA 94025, USA
    • Stanford Univ; Stanford PULSE Institute