The feasibility of controlled ultrafast pumping in the mid IR and the probe of the subsequent intramolecular dynamics is illustrated for vibrational excitation of the two metal carbonyls W(CO) 6 and Mn(CO) 5Br in solution. Pumping and probing is performed by short, 130 fs, pulses centered at about 2000 cm −1. Frequency resolved measurements of the time delayed probe pulse are performed. Measured two dimensional spectra are fitted by a kinetic scheme that models the vibrational dynamics. Fast relaxation is solvent induced with the solvent acting also as a heat bath. The (several) probe signals in the experiment can be thought of as the response of a finite state logic machine. This suggests that the molecular machine can act as an ultrafast (petaHertz) processor. The number of internal (memory) states of the machine is determined by the number of vibrational states in the kinetic scheme that can fit the observed relaxation. The number of outputs of the machine is the number of the several different available probe signals. It is shown that the machine is massively parallel because in each (sub ps) time step it produces an entire vector as an output and that each component of the output vector is, by itself, a transform over the input. Beyond that, the machine can produce a (finite number of) different output vectors in sequential time steps.
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