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Dive into the research topics where Cédric Bomme is active.

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Featured researches published by Cédric Bomme.


Nature | 2017

Femtosecond response of polyatomic molecules to ultra-intense hard X-rays

A. Rudenko; L. Inhester; K. Hanasaki; Xuanxuan Li; S. J. Robatjazi; Benjamin Erk; Rebecca Boll; Koudai Toyota; Y. Hao; O. Vendrell; Cédric Bomme; Evgeny Savelyev; Benedikt Rudek; Lutz Foucar; Stephen H. Southworth; C. S. Lehmann; B. Kraessig; T. Marchenko; M. Simon; K. Ueda; Ken R. Ferguson; Maximilian Bucher; Tais Gorkhover; S. Carron; Roberto Alonso-Mori; Jason E. Koglin; J. Correa; Garth J. Williams; Sébastien Boutet; Linda Young

X-ray free-electron lasers enable the investigation of the structure and dynamics of diverse systems, including atoms, molecules, nanocrystals and single bioparticles, under extreme conditions. Many imaging applications that target biological systems and complex materials use hard X-ray pulses with extremely high peak intensities (exceeding 1020 watts per square centimetre). However, fundamental investigations have focused mainly on the individual response of atoms and small molecules using soft X-rays with much lower intensities. Studies with intense X-ray pulses have shown that irradiated atoms reach a very high degree of ionization, owing to multiphoton absorption, which in a heteronuclear molecular system occurs predominantly locally on a heavy atom (provided that the absorption cross-section of the heavy atom is considerably larger than those of its neighbours) and is followed by efficient redistribution of the induced charge. In serial femtosecond crystallography of biological objects—an application of X-ray free-electron lasers that greatly enhances our ability to determine protein structure—the ionization of heavy atoms increases the local radiation damage that is seen in the diffraction patterns of these objects and has been suggested as a way of phasing the diffraction data. On the basis of experiments using either soft or less-intense hard X-rays, it is thought that the induced charge and associated radiation damage of atoms in polyatomic molecules can be inferred from the charge that is induced in an isolated atom under otherwise comparable irradiation conditions. Here we show that the femtosecond response of small polyatomic molecules that contain one heavy atom to ultra-intense (with intensities approaching 1020 watts per square centimetre), hard (with photon energies of 8.3 kiloelectronvolts) X-ray pulses is qualitatively different: our experimental and modelling results establish that, under these conditions, the ionization of a molecule is considerably enhanced compared to that of an individual heavy atom with the same absorption cross-section. This enhancement is driven by ultrafast charge transfer within the molecule, which refills the core holes that are created in the heavy atom, providing further targets for inner-shell ionization and resulting in the emission of more than 50 electrons during the X-ray pulse. Our results demonstrate that efficient modelling of X-ray-driven processes in complex systems at ultrahigh intensities is feasible.


Faraday Discussions | 2014

Imaging molecular structure through femtosecond photoelectron diffraction on aligned and oriented gas-phase molecules.

Rebecca Boll; Arnaud Rouzée; Marcus Adolph; Denis Anielski; Andrew Aquila; Sadia Bari; Cédric Bomme; Christoph Bostedt; John D. Bozek; Henry N. Chapman; Lauge Christensen; Ryan Coffee; Niccola Coppola; Sankar De; Piero Decleva; Sascha W. Epp; Benjamin Erk; Frank Filsinger; Lutz Foucar; Tais Gorkhover; Lars Gumprecht; André Hömke; Lotte Holmegaard; Per Johnsson; Jens S. Kienitz; Thomas Kierspel; Faton Krasniqi; Kai-Uwe Kühnel; Jochen Maurer; Marc Messerschmidt

This paper gives an account of our progress towards performing femtosecond time-resolved photoelectron diffraction on gas-phase molecules in a pump-probe setup combining optical lasers and an X-ray free-electron laser. We present results of two experiments aimed at measuring photoelectron angular distributions of laser-aligned 1-ethynyl-4-fluorobenzene (C(8)H(5)F) and dissociating, laser-aligned 1,4-dibromobenzene (C(6)H(4)Br(2)) molecules and discuss them in the larger context of photoelectron diffraction on gas-phase molecules. We also show how the strong nanosecond laser pulse used for adiabatically laser-aligning the molecules influences the measured electron and ion spectra and angular distributions, and discuss how this may affect the outcome of future time-resolved photoelectron diffraction experiments.


Optics Express | 2016

High-repetition-rate and high-photon-flux 70 eV high-harmonic source for coincidence ion imaging of gas-phase molecules

Jan Rothhardt; Steffen Hädrich; Yariv Shamir; M. Tschnernajew; Robert Klas; Armin Hoffmann; Getnet K. Tadesse; Arno Klenke; Thomas Gottschall; Tino Eidam; Jens Limpert; Andreas Tünnermann; Rebecca Boll; Cédric Bomme; Hatem Dachraoui; Benjamin Erk; M. Di Fraia; Daniel A. Horke; Thomas Kierspel; Terry Mullins; A. Przystawik; Evgeny Savelyev; Joss Wiese; Tim Laarmann; Jochen Küpper; Daniel Rolles

Unraveling and controlling chemical dynamics requires techniques to image structural changes of molecules with femtosecond temporal and picometer spatial resolution. Ultrashort-pulse x-ray free-electron lasers have significantly advanced the field by enabling advanced pump-probe schemes. There is an increasing interest in using table-top photon sources enabled by high-harmonic generation of ultrashort-pulse lasers for such studies. We present a novel high-harmonic source driven by a 100 kHz fiber laser system, which delivers 1011 photons/s in a single 1.3 eV bandwidth harmonic at 68.6 eV. The combination of record-high photon flux and high repetition rate paves the way for time-resolved studies of the dissociation dynamics of inner-shell ionized molecules in a coincidence detection scheme. First coincidence measurements on CH3I are shown and it is outlined how the anticipated advancement of fiber laser technology and improved sample delivery will, in the next step, allow pump-probe studies of ultrafast molecular dynamics with table-top XUV-photon sources. These table-top sources can provide significantly higher repetition rates than the currently operating free-electron lasers and they offer very high temporal resolution due to the intrinsically small timing jitter between pump and probe pulses.


Nature Communications | 2015

Selecting core-hole localization or delocalization in CS2 by photofragmentation dynamics.

Renaud Guillemin; P. Decleva; M. Stener; Cédric Bomme; T. Marin; L. Journel; T. Marchenko; R. K. Kushawaha; K. Jänkälä; N. Trcera; K. P. Bowen; Dennis W. Lindle; Maria Novella Piancastelli; M. Simon

Electronic core levels in molecules are highly localized around one atomic site. However, in single-photon ionization of symmetric molecules, the question of core-hole localization versus delocalization over two equivalent atoms has long been debated as the answer lies at the heart of quantum mechanics. Here, using a joint experimental and theoretical study of core-ionized carbon disulfide (CS2), we demonstrate that it is possible to experimentally select distinct molecular-fragmentation pathways in which the core hole can be considered as either localized on one sulfur atom or delocalized between two indistinguishable sulfur atoms. This feat is accomplished by measuring photoelectron angular distributions within the frame of the molecule, directly probing entanglement or disentanglement of quantum pathways as a function of how the molecule dissociates.


Structural Dynamics | 2016

Charge transfer in dissociating iodomethane and fluoromethane molecules ionized by intense femtosecond X-ray pulses.

Rebecca Boll; Benjamin Erk; Ryan Coffee; Sebastian Trippel; Thomas Kierspel; Cédric Bomme; John D. Bozek; Mitchell Burkett; Sebastian Carron; Ken R. Ferguson; Lutz Foucar; Jochen Küpper; T. Marchenko; Catalin Miron; M. Patanen; T. Osipov; Sebastian Schorb; Marc Simon; M. Swiggers; Simone Techert; K. Ueda; Christoph Bostedt; Daniel Rolles; Artem Rudenko

Ultrafast electron transfer in dissociating iodomethane and fluoromethane molecules was studied at the Linac Coherent Light Source free-electron laser using an ultraviolet-pump, X-ray-probe scheme. The results for both molecules are discussed with respect to the nature of their UV excitation and different chemical properties. Signatures of long-distance intramolecular charge transfer are observed for both species, and a quantitative analysis of its distance dependence in iodomethane is carried out for charge states up to I21+. The reconstructed critical distances for electron transfer are in good agreement with a classical over-the-barrier model and with an earlier experiment employing a near-infrared pump pulse.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2013

Double momentum spectrometer for ion-electron vector correlations in dissociative photoionization

Cédric Bomme; Renaud Guillemin; T. Marin; L. Journel; T. Marchenko; D. Dowek; N. Trcera; B. Pilette; A. Avila; H. Ringuenet; R. K. Kushawaha; Marc Simon

We have developed a new momentum spectrometer dedicated to momentum vector correlations in the context of deep core photoionization of atomic and molecular species in the gas phase. In this article, we describe the design and operation of the experimental setup. The capabilities of the apparatus are illustrated with a set of measurements done on the sulphur core 1s photoionization of gas-phase CS2.


Journal of Physics B | 2012

Molecular-frame photoelectron angular distribution imaging studies of OCS S1s photoionization

Cédric Bomme; Renaud Guillemin; T. Marin; L. Journel; T. Marchenko; N. Trcera; R. K. Kushawaha; M. N. Piancastelli; M. Simon; Mauro Stener; P. Decleva

Molecular-frame photoelectron angular distribution imaging studies of OCS S1s photoionization


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2017

Alignment, Orientation, and Coulomb Explosion of Difluoroiodobenzene Studied with the Pixel Imaging Mass Spectrometry (PImMS) Camera

Kasra Amini; Rebecca Boll; Alexandra Lauer; Michael Burt; Jason W. L. Lee; Lauge Christensen; Felix Brauβe; Terence Mullins; Evgeny Savelyev; Utuq Ablikim; N. Berrah; Cédric Bomme; S. Düsterer; Benjamin Erk; Hauke Höppner; Per Johnsson; Thomas Kierspel; Faruk Krecinic; Jochen Küpper; Maria Müller; Erland Müller; Harald Redlin; Arnaud Rouzée; Nora Schirmel; Jan Thøgersen; Simone Techert; S. Toleikis; Rolf Treusch; Sebastian Trippel; Anatoli Ulmer

Laser-induced adiabatic alignment and mixed-field orientation of 2,6-difluoroiodobenzene (C6H3F2I) molecules are probed by Coulomb explosion imaging following either near-infrared strong-field ionization or extreme-ultraviolet multi-photon inner-shell ionization using free-electron laser pulses. The resulting photoelectrons and fragment ions are captured by a double-sided velocity map imaging spectrometer and projected onto two position-sensitive detectors. The ion side of the spectrometer is equipped with a pixel imaging mass spectrometry camera, a time-stamping pixelated detector that can record the hit positions and arrival times of up to four ions per pixel per acquisition cycle. Thus, the time-of-flight trace and ion momentum distributions for all fragments can be recorded simultaneously. We show that we can obtain a high degree of one-and three-dimensional alignment and mixed-field orientation and compare the Coulomb explosion process induced at both wavelengths.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Identification of absolute geometries of cis and trans molecular isomers by Coulomb Explosion Imaging

Utuq Ablikim; Cédric Bomme; Hui Xiong; Evgeny Savelyev; Razib Obaid; B. Kaderiya; Sven Augustin; Kirsten Schnorr; I. Dumitriu; T. Osipov; R.C. Bilodeau; David Kilcoyne; Vinod Kumarappan; Artem Rudenko; N. Berrah; Daniel Rolles

An experimental route to identify and separate geometric isomers by means of coincident Coulomb explosion imaging is presented, allowing isomer-resolved photoionization studies on isomerically mixed samples. We demonstrate the technique on cis/trans 1,2-dibromoethene (C2H2Br2). The momentum correlation between the bromine ions in a three-body fragmentation process induced by bromine 3d inner-shell photoionization is used to identify the cis and trans structures of the isomers. The experimentally determined momentum correlations and the isomer-resolved fragment-ion kinetic energies are matched closely by a classical Coulomb explosion model.


Physical Review A | 2016

Ultrafast x-ray-induced nuclear dynamics in diatomic molecules using femtosecond x-ray-pump-x-ray-probe spectroscopy

C. S. Lehmann; Antonio Picón; Christoph Bostedt; Artem Rudenko; Agostino Marinelli; Dooshaye Moonshiram; T. Osipov; Daniel Rolles; N. Berrah; Cédric Bomme; Maximilian Bucher; Gilles Doumy; Benjamin Erk; Ken R. Ferguson; Tais Gorkhover; Phay Ho; E. P. Kanter; B. Krässig; J. Krzywinski; Alberto Lutman; Anne Marie March; D. Ray; Linda Young; Stephen T. Pratt; S. H. Southworth

Citation: Lehmann, C. S., Picon, A., Bostedt, C., Rudenko, A., Marinelli, A., Moonshiram, D., . . . Southworth, S. H. (2016). Ultrafast x-ray-induced nuclear dynamics in diatomic molecules using femtosecond x-ray-pump-x-ray-probe spectroscopy. Physical Review A, 94(1), 7. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.94.013426

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N. Berrah

University of Connecticut

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