Abstract

A mode-locked Ti:sapphire laser is made to oscillate at the frequency of the UVSOR storage ring, 90.115 MHz, in a multi-bunch operation mode. The third harmonic of the laser is available in the wavelength range 243-280 nm. Synchrotron radiation from an undulator is monochromated by a grazing-incidence monochromator and introduced coaxially with the laser. The temporal profile of the photon pulses is monitored in situ by a luminescing substance/photomultiplier combination. The delay timing between the laser and synchrotron radiation can be changed from 0 to 11 ns by adjusting an electronic module that provides phase-locked loop stabilization of the laser pulse. The reliability and feasibility of this laser-synchrotron radiation combination technique are demonstrated by applying pump-probe experiments to two physical systems. The first system is photodissociation of iodomethane (CHA) with a laser photon, followed by photoionization of I and CH3 fragments with synchrotron radiation. The second, two-photon ionization of He atoms, is studied as the prototype of a time-resolved experiment. The He+ signal counts as a function of the laser-synchrotron radiation delay are found to be enhanced in a narrow time window, which can be interpreted in terms of a short lifetime of the resonant state, He*(1s2p 1P), produced by primary synchrotron radiation excitation.

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