4.8 Article

Electric Nondipole Effect in Strong-Field Ionization

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS
Volume 126, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.126.053202

Keywords

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Funding

  1. German Academic Scholarship Foundation
  2. DFG (German Research Foundation)
  3. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
  4. DFG [SPP 1840]

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Strong-field ionization of atoms by circularly polarized femtosecond laser pulses results in a donut-shaped electron momentum distribution, which can be shifted forward by the magnetic non-dipole effect. In addition, there is an electric non-dipole effect causing changes in the radius of the distribution for different momentum directions.
Strong-field ionization of atoms by circularly polarized femtosecond laser pulses produces a donut-shaped electron momentum distribution. Within the dipole approximation this distribution is symmetric with respect to the polarization plane. The magnetic component of the light field is known to shift this distribution forward. Here, we show that this magnetic nondipole effect is not the only nondipole effect in strong-field ionization. We find that an electric nondipole effect arises that is due to the position dependence of the electric field and which can be understood in analogy to the Doppler effect. This electric nondipole effect manifests as an increase of the radius of the donut-shaped photoelectron momentum distribution for forward-directed momenta and as a decrease of this radius for backwards-directed electrons. We present experimental data showing this fingerprint of the electric nondipole effect and compare our findings with a classical model and quantum calculations.

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