† Corresponding author. E-mail:
Project supported by the National Key Research and Development Program of China (Grant No. 2017YFA0403300), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grants Nos. 11774129, 11274141, 11627807, 11604119, and 11534004), and the Jilin Provincial Research Foundation for Basic Research, China (Grant No. 20170101153JC).
We theoretically investigate the photoelectron emission from an atom irradiated by an amplitude modulated sinusoidally phase-modulated pulse through solving the time-dependent Schrödinger equation in the momentum space. By controlling the phase amplitude of the pulse in the frequency domain, it can be found that the photoelectron spectra appear as explicit interference phenomena, which originated from the interference between the directly ionized electron and the ionization of the pre-excited atom from different subpulses.
When atoms are irradiated by strong laser pulses, there are many nonlinear phenomena, such as high-order harmonic generation, nonsequential double ionization, and above threshold ionization (ATI).[1–3] ATI is an ionization progress that an atom can absorb more photons than its ionization threshold.[4] For higher laser intensity, there are two plateaus in the photoelectron spectra, which correspond to the direct ionization and the rescattering process, respectively.[5,6]
Due to the ionized electron rescattering with its parent ion, the rescattering electron carries the real-time structure information.[7,8] The photoelectron with higher energy can be used to detect structures of atoms and molecules.[9] When an atom interacts with a high frequency laser field, the lower order photoelectron also encodes the atomic orbital information.[10,11] Especially, the laser electric field plays an important role in the interaction between the atom and the laser pulse, and the photoelectron emission is sensitive to the laser’s parameters.Therefore, photoelectron spectroscopy is one of the important methods to detect the carrier envelope phase of the laser pulse.[12] In order to apply photoelectron spectroscopy well, many researchers made in-depth studies of its generation process.[12–19]
When the atom is driven by the strong laser pulse, according to the incident laser intensity, the ionization mechanism can be divided into multiphoton and tunneling ionization. For the multiphoton ionization process, there are many individual peaks at the photoelectron spectra, and the energy difference between the adjacent peaks is one photon energy (ω0). The energy position of these peaks is predicted by the conversation of energy nω0-(Ip+Up), where the Ip is the ionization energy of an atom and Up is the ponderomotive energy of the laser electric field.[20] From the time domain perspective, these photoelectron peaks are generated by the interference of the ionized electrons from different cycles in the laser pulse. In the photoelectron spectra, the interference structures from the various instants in one optical cycle also can be observed.[21] Using the interference information between the directly ionized electron and the rescattering electron, one can obtain the differential cross section and the corresponding phase of the electron-ion scattering amplitude.[22]
When the atom is irradiated by the multi-color laser pulse, there are many novel interference processes in the photoelectron emission.[23–29] The interference structure can be investigated by the semiclassical scheme in the tunneling regime.[30–32] Using the additional laser pulse, the interference of wave packets can be controlled. Moreover, the shaped pulse laser provided more convenience to control the photo-electron interference. By controlling the amplitude, phase, and polarization of the pulse in the frequency domain, the pulse with an almost arbitrary shape can be obtained in the time domain.[33,34] For the sinusoidally phase-modulated pulse, one Fourier-transform-limited pulse can be divided into many subpulses. The ionization and excitation of the atom in this pulse were studied.[35,36] In the research, few level models are available and the calculated results are in qualitative agreement with the experiment for the weak field. In order to investigate the photoelectron from the modulated pulse, it needs a very large space to include the total ionized electron. Thereby, for the intense laser field, it is rather difficult to investigate the photoelectron emission under the coordinate representation. This problem can be avoided by solving the time dependent Schrödinger equation (TDSE) in momentum space.[37,38] In this work, using this scheme, we investigate the photoelectron emission of an atom irradiated by sinusoidally phase-modulated shaping pulses. It is found that the photoelectron spectra from the phase-modulated laser pulses have many subpeaks, which is caused by the interference from the ionized electrons from different laser subpulses through the analysis of the time-dependent population of the continuum states.
In order to obtain the photoelectron spectra, we calculated the time-dependent wavefunction under the momentum representation.[39,40] In the velocity gauge and the dipole approximation, the TDSE of an atom in a strong laser pulse can be expressed as (atomic units are used throughout, unless otherwise stated):
By using the momentum eigenfunction as the basis set, the time-dependent wavefunction can be expanded as
By inserting Eq. (
The time-dependent wavefunction can be integrated by the second order split-operator technique
There is a quadratic singularity at p = p′, and the singularity can be removed by using the Landé subtraction technique,[41] which can be realized by the partial wave expansion scheme.
Here, we map the semi-infinite domain [0,∞] to the finite one [−1,1], then use the Gaussian quadrature to discretize the grids in the momentum space.[42] The mapping function is taken as
In the frequency domain, the phase-modulated laser pulse can be changed by the phase function: φ(ω) = Asin[(ω − ωref)*T + φint], where A is the amplitude of the modulation function, T is the frequency of the oscillation function, and φint is the phase offset of the Sinusoidal function. φint is set to 0 in this paper. In the time domain, the sinusoidal phase modulation pulse produces a sequence of subpulses, the separation of which is determined by the amplitude T. The relative peak amplitudes of subpulses are controlled by the value of A. Figure
The photoelectron emission irradiated by these sinusoidal pulses are shown in Fig.
Next, we examine the dependence of the photoelectron spectra on the phase amplitude A of the modulated pulse, as shown in Fig.
In order to gain insights into the generation mechanism of the subpeaks in the photoelectron spectra, the transient study of the photoelectron emission is adopted. Figure
In order to clearly see the difference between the photoelectron spectra, we use the logarithm scale to replot the spectra at instants t = 78 o.c., 104 o.c., and 130 o.c. After the atom is irradiated by the subpulse SP1, the intensity of the photoelectron spectrum at t = 78 o.c. is very weak, as shown by the black dash line in Fig.
As explained above, the subpeaks are generated from the interference between the ionization from the subpulses SP2 and SP3. The feature of the subpeaks should be associated with the parameters of these subpulses. The laser electric fields with different T are present in Fig.
The more detailed photoelectron spectra from the atom irradiated by the modulated pulse with the variety of T is shown in Fig.
In summary, the atom is not only ionized but excited by the main subpulse in the modulated pulse, then the excited state can be further ionized by the successive subpulse after the main one, the interference between the ionized electrons from these subpulses leads to the subpeaks in photoelectron spectra. Therefore, the inter-pulse interference of the photoelectron emission can be observed from the atom in the amplitude modulated sinusoidally phase-modulated pulse.
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