Observation of laser-induced electronic structure in oriented polyatomic molecules

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Abstract

All attosecond time-resolved measurements have so far relied on the use of intense near-infrared laser pulses. In particular, attosecond streaking, laser-induced electron diffraction and high-harmonic generation all make use of non-perturbative light-matter interactions. Remarkably, the effect of the strong laser field on the studied sample has often been neglected in previous studies. Here we use high-harmonic spectroscopy to measure laser-induced modifications of the electronic structure of molecules. We study high-harmonic spectra of spatially oriented CH 3 F and CH 3 Br as generic examples of polar polyatomic molecules. We accurately measure intensity ratios of even and odd-harmonic orders, and of the emission from aligned and unaligned molecules. We show that these robust observables reveal a substantial modification of the molecular electronic structure by the external laser field. Our insights offer new challenges and opportunities for a range of emerging strong-field attosecond spectroscopies.

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Kraus, P. M., Tolstikhin, O. I., Baykusheva, D., Rupenyan, A., Schneider, J., Bisgaard, C. Z., … Wörner, H. J. (2015). Observation of laser-induced electronic structure in oriented polyatomic molecules. Nature Communications, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms8039

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