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Dynamics of laser-induced molecular alignment in the impulsive and adiabatic regimes : A direct comparison

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TLDR
In this article, a unified framework for the analysis of the dynamic alignment of linear molecules induced by a strong nonresonant laser field is presented, and a comparison between the degree of alignment under the same conditions of pulse intensity and rotational temperature was performed between the impulsive and adiabatic cases.
Abstract
Quantum-mechanical calculations are performed of the dynamic alignment of linear molecules induced by a strong nonresonant laser field. Within this framework we have treated in a unified fashion the alignment with laser pulses of varying duration from the short pulse impulsive limit $({\ensuremath{\tau}}_{\text{pulse}}⪡{T}_{\mathrm{rot}})$ to the long pulse adiabatic limit $({\ensuremath{\tau}}_{\text{pulse}}g{T}_{\mathrm{rot}})$. The temporal behavior of the alignment in both these limits, and in the intermediate pulse duration regime, have been analyzed. For the impulsive limit the dependence of the degree of maximum alignment upon the laser pulse duration was examined and the intensity-dependent optimum pulse duration explained. A comparison between the degree of alignment under the same conditions of pulse intensity and rotational temperature was performed between the impulsive and adiabatic cases. The adiabatic case was found to always provide a better degree of alignment for a given intensity which we show is due to the zero relative phasing between the component states of the superposition that form the pendular states. We have explicitly calculated the angular distribution of an ensemble of linear molecules as it evolves through a rotational revival; a rich structure is found that may be useful in guiding future experiments that utilize the field free alignment in a revival.

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Molecular imaging using recolliding electrons

TL;DR: In this article, a review of the theoretical concepts and experimental achievements towards using recollisions to image molecules is presented, and it is shown that sub-Angstrom and sub-femtosecond resolution is possible within these schemes, which can be one of high-harmonic radiation, electrons from high-order above threshold ionization, or fragment kinetic energies from recollision-induced dissociation or Coulomb explosion.
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Quantum control of molecular rotation

TL;DR: The angular momentum of molecules is naturally quantized, time evolution is governed by a well-known Hamiltonian with only a few accurately known parameters, and transitions between rotational levels can be driven by external fields from various parts of the electromagnetic spectrum.
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Manipulation of Molecules with Electromagnetic Fields

TL;DR: A review of the major developments that have led to the current understanding of molecule-field interactions and experimental methods for manipulating molecules with electromagnetic fields can be found in this paper, which contains 853 references and includes sections on Field control of molecular beams, external field traps for cold molecules, Control of molecular orientation and molecular alignment, Manipulation of molecules by non-conservative forces, Ultracold molecules and ultracold chemistry, Controlled many-body phenomena, Entanglement of molecules and dipole arrays, and Stability of molecular systems in high-frequency superintense laser fields.
Journal ArticleDOI

Manipulation of molecules with electromagnetic fields

TL;DR: A review of the major developments that have led to the current understanding of molecule-field interactions and experimental methods for manipulating molecules with electromagnetic fields can be found in this article, which contains 852 references, including sections on field control of molecular beams, external field traps for cold molecules, control of the molecular orientation and molecular alignment, manipulation of molecules by non-conservative forces, ultracold molecules and ultracolds, controlled many-body phenomena, entanglement of molecules and dipole arrays, and stability of molecular systems in high-frequency superintense laser fields.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-probing of molecules with high harmonic generation

TL;DR: In this article, the most important aspects of the molecular self-probing paradigm are presented, which views the process of high harmonic generation as a molecule being probed by one of its own electrons.
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