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Dive into the research topics where Anton Kalinin is active.

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Featured researches published by Anton Kalinin.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Vibrationally resolved decay width of interatomic Coulombic decay in HeNe.

F. Trinter; Joshua Williams; M. Weller; M. Waitz; M. Pitzer; J. Voigtsberger; C. Schober; Gregor Kastirke; C. Müller; C. Goihl; Phillip Burzynski; Florian Wiegandt; R. Wallauer; Anton Kalinin; L. Schmidt; M. Schöffler; Ying-Chih Chiang; Kirill Gokhberg; T. Jahnke; R. Dörner

We investigate the ionization of HeNe from below the He 1s3p excitation to the He ionization threshold. We observe HeNe+ ions with an enhancement by more than a factor of 60 when the He side couples resonantly to the radiation field. These ions are an experimental proof of a two-center resonant photoionization mechanism predicted by Najjari et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 105, 153002 (2010)]. Furthermore, our data provide electronic and vibrational state resolved decay widths of interatomic Coulombic decay in HeNe dimers. We find that the interatomic Coulombic decay lifetime strongly increases with increasing vibrational state.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Evolution of interatomic Coulombic decay in the time domain.

F. Trinter; Joshua Williams; M. Weller; M. Waitz; M. Pitzer; J. Voigtsberger; C. Schober; Gregor Kastirke; C. Müller; C. Goihl; Phillip Burzynski; Florian Wiegandt; Tobias Bauer; R. Wallauer; H. Sann; Anton Kalinin; L. Ph. H. Schmidt; M. Schöffler; Nicolas Sisourat; T. Jahnke

During the past 15 years a novel decay mechanism of excited atoms has been discovered and investigated. This so-called interatomic Coulombic decay (ICD) involves the chemical environment of the electronically excited atom: the excitation energy is transferred (in many cases over long distances) to a neighbor of the initially excited particle usually ionizing that neighbor. It turned out that ICD is a very common decay route in nature as it occurs across van der Waals and hydrogen bonds. The time evolution of ICD is predicted to be highly complex, as its efficiency strongly depends on the distance of the atoms involved and this distance typically changes during the decay. Here we present the first direct measurement of the temporal evolution of ICD using a novel experimental approach.


Nature Communications | 2014

Imaging the structure of the trimer systems 4He3 and 3He4He2

J. Voigtsberger; S. Zeller; Jasper Becht; N. Neumann; F. Sturm; H.-K. Kim; M. Waitz; F. Trinter; Maksim Kunitski; Anton Kalinin; Jian Wu; Wieland Schöllkopf; Dario Bressanini; A. Czasch; Joshua Williams; L. Schmidt; M. Schöffler; R. E. Grisenti; T. Jahnke; R. Dörner

Helium shows fascinating quantum phenomena unseen in any other element. In its liquid phase, it is the only known superfluid. The smallest aggregates of helium, the dimer (He2) and the trimer (He3) are, in their predicted structure, unique natural quantum objects. While one might intuitively expect the structure of (4)He3 to be an equilateral triangle, a manifold of predictions on its shape have yielded an ongoing dispute for more than 20 years. These predictions range from (4)He3 being mainly linear to being mainly an equilateral triangle. Here we show experimental images of the wave functions of (4)He3 and (3)He(4)He2 obtained by Coulomb explosion imaging of mass-selected clusters. We propose that (4)He3 is a structureless random cloud and that (3)He(4)He2 exists as a quantum halo state.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Imaging the He2 quantum halo state using a free electron laser

S. Zeller; Maksim Kunitski; J. Voigtsberger; Anton Kalinin; Alexander Schottelius; C. Schober; M. Waitz; H. Sann; Alexander Hartung; Tobias Bauer; M. Pitzer; F. Trinter; C. Goihl; Christian Janke; Martin Richter; Gregor Kastirke; M. Weller; A. Czasch; Markus Kitzler; Markus Braune; R. E. Grisenti; Wieland Schöllkopf; L. Schmidt; M. Schöffler; J. B. Williams; T. Jahnke; R. Dörner

Significance In bound matter on all length scales, from nuclei to molecules to macroscopic solid objects, most of the density of the bound particles is within the range of the interaction potential which holds the system together. Quantum halos on the contrary are a type of matter where the particle density is mostly outside the range of the interaction potential in the tunneling region of the potential. Few examples of these fascinating systems are known in nuclear and molecular physics. The conceptually simplest halo system is made of only two particles. Here we experimentally image the wavefunction of the He2 quantum halo. It shows the predicted exponential shape of a tunneling wavefunction. Quantum tunneling is a ubiquitous phenomenon in nature and crucial for many technological applications. It allows quantum particles to reach regions in space which are energetically not accessible according to classical mechanics. In this “tunneling region,” the particle density is known to decay exponentially. This behavior is universal across all energy scales from nuclear physics to chemistry and solid state systems. Although typically only a small fraction of a particle wavefunction extends into the tunneling region, we present here an extreme quantum system: a gigantic molecule consisting of two helium atoms, with an 80% probability that its two nuclei will be found in this classical forbidden region. This circumstance allows us to directly image the exponentially decaying density of a tunneling particle, which we achieved for over two orders of magnitude. Imaging a tunneling particle shows one of the few features of our world that is truly universal: the probability to find one of the constituents of bound matter far away is never zero but decreases exponentially. The results were obtained by Coulomb explosion imaging using a free electron laser and furthermore yielded He2’s binding energy of 151.9±13.3 neV, which is in agreement with most recent calculations.


Nature Photonics | 2016

Electron spin polarization in strong-field ionization of xenon atoms

Alexander Hartung; Felipe Morales; Maksim Kunitski; Kevin Henrichs; Alina Laucke; Martin Richter; T. Jahnke; Anton Kalinin; Markus Schöffler; L. Schmidt; Misha Ivanov; Olga Smirnova; R. Dörner

Electron spin polarization is experimentally detected and investigated via strong-field ionization of xenon atoms.


Physical Review A | 2013

Ion-impact-induced interatomic Coulombic decay in neon and argon dimers

H.-K. Kim; H. Gassert; M. Schöffler; J. Titze; M. Waitz; J. Voigtsberger; F. Trinter; Jasper Becht; Anton Kalinin; N. Neumann; C. Zhou; L. Ph. H. Schmidt; O. Jagutzki; A. Czasch; H. Merabet; H. Schmidt-Böcking; T. Jahnke; A. Cassimi; R. Dörner

We investigate the contribution of Interatomic Coulombic Decay induced by ion impact in neon and argon dimers (Ne


Physical Review B | 2014

Observation of crystallization slowdown in supercooled parahydrogen and orthodeuterium quantum liquid mixtures

Matthias Kühnel; José María Fernández Sánchez; Filippo Tramonto; Guzmán Tejeda; Elena Moreno; Anton Kalinin; M. Nava; D. E. Galli; S. Montero; R. E. Grisenti

_2


Physical Review Letters | 2018

Shrinking of rapidly evaporating water microdroplets reveals their extreme supercooling

Claudia Goy; Marco A. C. Potenza; Sebastian Dedera; Marilena Tomut; Emmanuel Guillerm; Anton Kalinin; Kay-Obbe Voss; Alexander Schottelius; N. Petridis; Alexey Prosvetov; Guzmán Tejeda; José M. García Fernández; C. Trautmann; Frédéric Caupin; Ulrich A. Glasmacher; R. E. Grisenti

and Ar


Physical Review A | 2014

Interatomic-Coulombic-decay-induced recapture of photoelectrons in helium dimers

Phillip Burzynski; F. Trinter; J. B. Williams; M. Weller; M. Waitz; M. Pitzer; J. Voigtsberger; C. Schober; Gregor Kastirke; C. Müller; C. Goihl; Florian Wiegandt; R. Wallauer; Anton Kalinin; L. Ph. H. Schmidt; M. Schöffler; G. Schiwietz; Nicolas Sisourat; T. Jahnke; R. Dörner

_2


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2015

Mixing effects in the crystallization of supercooled quantum binary liquids.

Matthias Kühnel; José M. García Fernández; Filippo Tramonto; Guzmán Tejeda; Elena Moreno; Anton Kalinin; M. Nava; D. E. Galli; S. Montero; R. E. Grisenti

) to the production of low energy electrons. Our experiments cover a broad range of perturbation strengths and reaction channels. We use 11.37 MeV/u S

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T. Jahnke

Goethe University Frankfurt

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R. Dörner

Goethe University Frankfurt

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R. E. Grisenti

Goethe University Frankfurt

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F. Trinter

Goethe University Frankfurt

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J. Voigtsberger

Goethe University Frankfurt

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M. Schöffler

Goethe University Frankfurt

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M. Waitz

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Maksim Kunitski

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Guzmán Tejeda

Spanish National Research Council

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A. Czasch

Goethe University Frankfurt

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