Bond-length dependence of attosecond ionization delays in O 2 arising from electron correlation to a shape resonance

Author:

Hammerland Daniel1ORCID,Berglitsch Thomas1ORCID,Zhang Pengju1ORCID,Luu Tran Trung2ORCID,Ueda Kiyoshi13ORCID,Lucchese Robert R.4ORCID,Wörner Hans Jakob1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. ETH Zürich, Laboratorium für Physikalische Chemie, Zürich, Switzerland.

2. Department of Physics, The University of Hong Kong, SAR Hong Kong, China.

3. Department of Chemistry, Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan.

4. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, USA.

Abstract

We experimentally and theoretically demonstrate that electron correlation can cause the bond-length sensitivity of a shape resonance to induce an unexpected vibrational state–dependent ionization delay in a nonresonant channel. This discovery was enabled by a high-resolution attosecond-interferometry experiment based on a 400-nm driving and dressing wavelength. The short-wavelength driver results in a 6.2–electron volt separation between harmonics, markedly reducing the spectral overlap in the measured interferogram. We demonstrate the promise of this method on O 2 , a system characterized by broad vibrational progressions and a dense photoelectron spectrum. We measure a 40-attosecond variation of the photoionization delays over the X 2 Π g vibrational progression. Multichannel calculations show that this variation originates from a strong bond-length dependence of the energetic position of a shape resonance in the b 4 Σ g channel, which translates to the observed effects through electron correlation. The unprecedented energy resolution and delay accuracies demonstrate the promise of visible-light–driven molecular attosecond interferometry.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

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