Quantum-mechanical models for photo-ionization: Uni-directional electron re-scattering by a laser pulse

2008 
Abstract The interaction of a hydrogen atom with a linearly ( z- ) polarized laser pulse is described by numerical solution of the three-dimensional Schrodinger equation. Photo-ionization of the ground state, with pulses having three or more optical cycles at photon energies well above the ionization potential and maximum intensity 10 15  W cm −2 , yields symmetric opposite fluxes of electrons preferentially in the + z and − z directions. One-cycle laser pulses can lead to modest symmetry breaking, e.g., more intense electron fluxes in the + z direction than in the − z direction, depending on the carrier-envelope phase (CEP) of the pulse. Production of uni-directional electron fluxes, similar to those observed in Coulomb scattering, calls for laser pulses with stronger intensity, or lower carrier frequency, or shorter duration with appropriate CEP, e.g., half-cycle pulses in the attosecond time domain. Here, uni-directionality is achieved by a four-step mechanism: (i) photo-ionization, (ii) turn-around of the electron, (iii) scattering from the atom's core and (iv) drift in the forward direction.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    35
    References
    20
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []