Electron dynamics following photoionization: Decoherence due to the nuclear-wave-packet width
Author(s) -
Morgane Vacher,
Lee Steinberg,
Andrew J. Jenkins,
Michael J. Bearpark,
Michael A. Robb
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
physical review a
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1094-1622
pISSN - 1050-2947
DOI - 10.1103/physreva.92.040502
Subject(s) - dephasing , quantum decoherence , physics , attosecond , wave packet , photoionization , wigner distribution function , electron , coherence (philosophical gambling strategy) , ionization , wave function , atomic physics , quantum , quantum mechanics , ultrashort pulse , laser , ion
The advent of attosecond techniques opens up the possibility to observe experimentally electron dynamics following ionization of molecules. Theoretical studies of pure electron dynamics at single fixed nuclear geometries in molecules have demonstrated oscillatory charge migration at a well-defined frequency but often neglecting the natural width of the nuclear wave packet. The effect on electron dynamics of the spatial delocalization of the nuclei is an outstanding question. Here, we show how the inherent distribution of nuclear geometries leads to dephasing. Using a simple analytical model, we demonstrate that the conditions for a long-lived electronic coherence are a narrow nuclear wave packet and almost parallel potential-energy surfaces of the states involved. We demonstrate with numerical simulations the decoherence of electron dynamics for two real molecular systems (paraxylene and polycyclic norbornadiene), which exhibit different decoherence time scales. To represent the quantum distribution of geometries of the nuclear wave packet, the Wigner distribution function is used. The electron dynamics decoherence result has significant implications for the interpretation of attosecond spectroscopy experiments since one no longer expects long-lived oscillations.
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