Abstract

Classical and semiclassical methods are developed to calculate and invert the wave packet motion measured in pump-probe experiments. With classical propagation of the Wigner distribution of the initial wave packet created by the pump pulse, we predict the approximate probe signal with slightly displaced recurrence peaks, and derive a set of first-order canonical perturbation expressions to relate the temporal features of the signal to the characteristics of the potential surface. A reduced dynamics scheme based on the Gaussian assumption leads to the correct center of mass motion but does not describe the evolution of the shape of the wave packet accurately. To incorporate the quantum interference into classical trajectories, we propose a final-value representation semiclassical method, specifically designed for the purpose of computing pump-probe signals, and demonstrate its efficiency and accuracy with a Morse oscillator and two kinetically coupled Morse oscillators. For the case of one-color pump probe, a simple phase-space quantization scheme is devised to reproduce the temporal profile at the left-turning point without actual wave packet propagation, revealing a quantum mechanical perspective of the nearly classical pump-probe signal.

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