Abstract

We analyze the effects of laser-induced Stark shift and irreversible population loss on the technique of chirped-frequency adiabatic passage, and the ensuing symmetries and asymmetries in the ionization and fluorescence signals. We find that the properties of the detection signal depend critically on the fashion in which it is collected: for example, the post-pulse populations of the ground and excited states, and the ionization signal collected during the excitation, possess different symmetry properties with respect to the frequency chirp rate and the static frequency detuning. We illustrate these features with two exactly soluble analytic models, which describe simultaneous excitation and ionization of a two-state quantum system, as it typically occurs in atomic excitation with femtosecond laser pulses. We find that the ionization signal may exhibit unexpected oscillations and derive the conditions for maximizing their contrast.

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