Abstract

${\mathrm{D}}_{2}$ molecules, excited by linearly cross-polarized femtosecond extreme ultraviolet (XUV) and near-infrared (NIR) light pulses, reveal highly structured ${\mathrm{D}}^{+}$ ion fragment momenta and angular distributions that originate from two different four-step dissociative ionization pathways after four-photon absorption (one XUV $+$ three NIR). We show that, even for very low dissociation kinetic energy release $\ensuremath{\le}$ 240 meV, specific electronic excitation pathways can be identified and isolated in the final ion momentum distributions. With the aid of ab initio electronic structure and time-dependent Schr\"odinger equation calculations, angular momentum, energy, and parity conservation are used to identify the excited neutral molecular states and molecular orientations relative to the polarization vectors in these different photoexcitation and dissociation sequences of the neutral ${\mathrm{D}}_{2}$ molecule and its ${\mathrm{D}}_{2}^{+}$ cation. In one sequential photodissociation pathway, molecules aligned along either of the two light polarization vectors are excluded, while another pathway selects molecules aligned parallel to the light propagation direction. The evolution of the nuclear wave packet on the intermediate $B{\phantom{\rule{0.16em}{0ex}}}^{1}{\mathrm{\ensuremath{\Sigma}}}_{u}^{+}$ electronic state of the neutral ${\mathrm{D}}_{2}$ molecule is also probed in real time.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe hydrogen molecule H2 is the simplest neutral molecule consisting of only two protons and two electrons

  • Time-resolved studies are already targeting nonadiabatic charge dynamics in larger molecules with attosecond precision [2–4], but a comprehensive understanding of few-photon absorption based on angle- and energy-resolved measurements, providing highly differential insight, in small systems is still lacking

  • The absorption of a few NIR photons following XUV photoabsorption enables the population of the repulsive molecular D+2 cation 1 2 u+(2pσu) state on which the molecule dissociates with a limit of Ediss(D+2 ), producing the deuterium fragment ion D+ with very low kinetic energy that we detect and a neutral fragment D

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Summary

Introduction

The hydrogen molecule H2 is the simplest neutral molecule consisting of only two protons and two electrons. Due to its relative simplicity, H2 serves as a model candidate for studying photoexcitation and ionization dynamics in great detail via nonlinear interrogation schemes. One challenge for modern multidimensional spectroscopy is to understand how the dissociation dynamics far away from equilibrium evolves in time [1] and how the relative populations of specific excited states can be controlled. Time-resolved studies are already targeting nonadiabatic charge dynamics in (much) larger molecules with attosecond precision [2–4], but a comprehensive understanding of few-photon absorption based on angle- and energy-resolved measurements, providing highly differential insight, in small systems is still lacking. [2,5–11]), the role of the molecular orientation with respect to the polarization vectors of the light pulses for the state population and their dissociation dynamics is often still elusive.

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