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X. Yang

Researcher at Academia Sinica

Publications -  12
Citations -  592

X. Yang is an academic researcher from Academia Sinica. The author has contributed to research in topics: Photodissociation & Undulator. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 12 publications receiving 585 citations. Previous affiliations of X. Yang include Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

Papers
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Performance of the vacuum ultraviolet high-resolution and high-flux beamline for chemical dynamics studies at the Advanced Light Source

TL;DR: In this article, an undulator beamline, with an energy range from 6 to 30 eV, has been constructed for chemical dynamics experiments, where the higher harmonics of the undulator are suppressed by a novel, windowless gas filter.
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A differentially pumped harmonic filter on the Chemical Dynamics Beamline at the Advanced Light Source

TL;DR: In this paper, a differentially pumped rare gas cell was developed to suppress undulator harmonics on the Chemical Dynamics Beamline at the Advanced Light Source (ALS) in order to achieve greater than 104 suppression of the harmonics with no measurable (<5%) attenuation of the fundamental.
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Universal crossed molecular beams apparatus with synchrotron photoionization mass spectrometric product detection

TL;DR: Vacuum ultraviolet radiation was generated from an undulator at the Advanced Light Source Synchrotron facility and used for photoionization detection of reaction products in a new universal crossed molecular beams machine.
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Multiple dynamical pathways in the O(1D)+CH4 reaction: A comprehensive crossed beam study

TL;DR: In this article, the O(1D)+CH4 reaction has been investigated using universal crossed molecular beam methods, and the angular resolved time-of-flight spectra have been measured for various reaction channels of the title reaction.
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Photodissociation of ozone at 193 nm by high-resolution photofragment translational spectroscopy

TL;DR: Turnipseed et al. as mentioned in this paper used high-resolution photofragment translational spectroscopy to study the photodissociation of ozone at 193 nm using high resolution photofrags and showed six distinct peaks in the time-of-flight spectra for the O2 product and its momentum-matched O atom counterpart.