4.8 Article

Correlated electron emission in multiphoton double ionization

Journal

NATURE
Volume 405, Issue 6787, Pages 658-661

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NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/35015033

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Electronic correlations govern the dynamics of many phenomena in nature, such as chemical reactions and solid state effects, including superconductivity. Such correlation effects can be most clearly investigated in processes involving single atoms. In particular, the emission of two electrons from an atom-induced by the impact of a single photon(1), a charged particle(2) or by a short laser pulse(3)-has become the standard process for studies of dynamical electron correlations. Atoms and molecules exposed to laser fields that are comparable in intensity to the nuclear fields have extremely high probabilities for double ionization(4,5); this has been attributed to electron-electron interaction(3). Here we report a strong correlation between the magnitude and the direction of the momentum of two electrons that are emitted from an argon atom, driven by a femtosecond laser pulse (at 38 TW cm(-2)). Increasing the laser intensity causes the momentum correlation between the electrons to be lost, implying that a transition in the laser-atom coupling mechanism takes place.

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