4.6 Article

Coherent electron emission beyond Young-type interference from diatomic molecules

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW A
Volume 93, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevA.93.012713

Keywords

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Funding

  1. EU Seventh Framework Programme [PIRSES-GA-2010-269243]
  2. Norden Top Researcher Initiative

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It has been known for more than 15 years that the differential cross section of electrons emitted from diatomic molecules during interaction with energetic charged particles oscillates as a function of electron momentum. The origin of the phenomenon is two-center interference, which naturally relates it back to the Young double-slit experiment. In addition to a characteristic frequency which can be described by lowest-order perturbation theories, the observation and origin of higher-order harmonics of the basic oscillation frequency has been much discussed. Here, we show that high harmonics of the fundamental Young-type oscillation frequency observed in electron spectra in fast ion-molecule collisions can be clearly exposed in numerical solutions of the time-dependent Schrodinger equation within a one-dimensional model. Momentum distribution of the ejected electron is analyzed and shows that the phenomenon emerges when the charged particle beam collides with diatomic molecules with substantial large internuclear distance. Frequency spectra from nonperturbative calculations for electron emission from Rb-2(+) and Cs-2(+) exhibit a pronounced high-order oscillation in contrast to similar close-coupling calculations performed on H-2 targets. The electron emission from these heavy molecules contains second-and third-order harmonics which are fully reproduced in an analytic model based on the Born series. Extending to triatomic molecular targets displays an increased range of harmonics. This suggests that electron emission spectra from new experiments on heavy diatomic and linear polyatomic molecular targets may provide a unique insight into competing coherent emission mechanisms and their relative strength.

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