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Dive into the research topics where Denis Anielski is active.

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Featured researches published by Denis Anielski.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Time-Resolved Measurement of Interatomic Coulombic Decay in Ne2

Kirsten Schnorr; Arne Senftleben; M. Kurka; A. Rudenko; Lutz Foucar; Georg H. Schmid; Alexander Broska; Thomas Pfeifer; Kristina Meyer; Denis Anielski; Rebecca Boll; Daniel Rolles; Matthias Kübel; Matthias F. Kling; Y. H. Jiang; S. Mondal; T. Tachibana; K. Ueda; T. Marchenko; Marc Simon; G. Brenner; Rolf Treusch; S. Scheit; V. Averbukh; J. Ullrich; C. D. Schröter; R. Moshammer

The lifetime of interatomic Coulombic decay (ICD) [L. S. Cederbaum et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 79, 4778 (1997)] in Ne2 is determined via an extreme ultraviolet pump-probe experiment at the Free-Electron Laser in Hamburg. The pump pulse creates a 2s inner-shell vacancy in one of the two Ne atoms, whereupon the ionized dimer undergoes ICD resulting in a repulsive Ne+(2p(-1))-Ne+(2p(-1)) state, which is probed with a second pulse, removing a further electron. The yield of coincident Ne+-Ne2+ pairs is recorded as a function of the pump-probe delay, allowing us to deduce the ICD lifetime of the Ne2(+)(2s(-1)) state to be (150±50)  fs, in agreement with quantum calculations.


Science | 2014

Shapes and vorticities of superfluid helium nanodroplets

Luis F. Gomez; Ken R. Ferguson; James P. Cryan; Camila Bacellar; Rico Mayro P. Tanyag; Curtis Jones; Sebastian Schorb; Denis Anielski; A. Belkacem; Charles Bernando; Rebecca Boll; John D. Bozek; Sebastian Carron; Gang Chen; Tjark Delmas; Lars Englert; Sascha W. Epp; Benjamin Erk; Lutz Foucar; Robert Hartmann; Alexander Hexemer; Martin Huth; Justin Kwok; Stephen R. Leone; Jonathan H. S. Ma; Filipe R. N. C. Maia; Erik Malmerberg; Stefano Marchesini; Daniel M. Neumark; Billy K. Poon

X-raying superfluid helium droplets When physicists rotate the superfluid 4He, it develops a regular array of tiny whirlpools, called vortices. The same phenomenon should occur in helium droplets half a micrometer in size, but studying individual droplets is tricky. Gomez et al. used x-ray diffraction to deduce the shape of individual rotating droplets and image the resulting vortex patterns, which confirmed the superfluidity of the droplets. They found that superfluid droplets can host a surprising number of vortices and can rotate faster than normal droplets without disintegrating. Science, this issue p. 906 Vortex lattices inside individual helium droplets are imaged using x-ray diffraction. Helium nanodroplets are considered ideal model systems to explore quantum hydrodynamics in self-contained, isolated superfluids. However, exploring the dynamic properties of individual droplets is experimentally challenging. In this work, we used single-shot femtosecond x-ray coherent diffractive imaging to investigate the rotation of single, isolated superfluid helium-4 droplets containing ~108 to 1011 atoms. The formation of quantum vortex lattices inside the droplets is confirmed by observing characteristic Bragg patterns from xenon clusters trapped in the vortex cores. The vortex densities are up to five orders of magnitude larger than those observed in bulk liquid helium. The droplets exhibit large centrifugal deformations but retain axially symmetric shapes at angular velocities well beyond the stability range of viscous classical droplets.


Science | 2014

Imaging charge transfer in iodomethane upon x-ray photoabsorption

Benjamin Erk; Rebecca Boll; Sebastian Trippel; Denis Anielski; Lutz Foucar; Benedikt Rudek; Sascha W. Epp; Ryan Coffee; Sebastian Carron; Sebastian Schorb; Ken R. Ferguson; Michele Swiggers; John D. Bozek; Marc Simon; T. Marchenko; Jochen Küpper; Ilme Schlichting; Joachim Ullrich; Christoph Bostedt; Daniel Rolles; Artem Rudenko

Tightly tracking charge migration Electron transfer dynamics underlie many chemical and biochemical reactions. Erk et al. examined the charge migration between individual carbon and iodine atoms during dissociation of iodomethane (ICH3) molecules (see the Perspective by Pratt). After initiating scission of the C-I bond with a relatively low-energy laser pulse, they introduced a higher-energy x-ray pulse to instigate ionization and charge migration. Delaying the arrival time of the x-ray pulse effectively varied the separation distance being probed as the fragments steadily drifted apart. The experimental approach should also prove useful for future studies of charge transfer dynamics in different molecular or solid-state systems. Science, this issue p. 288; see also p. 267 A free-electron laser enables precise tracking of electron movement between segments of a dissociating molecule. [Also see Perspective by Pratt] Studies of charge transfer are often hampered by difficulties in determining the charge localization at a given time. Here, we used ultrashort x-ray free-electron laser pulses to image charge rearrangement dynamics within gas-phase iodomethane molecules during dissociation induced by a synchronized near-infrared (NIR) laser pulse. Inner-shell photoionization creates positive charge, which is initially localized on the iodine atom. We map the electron transfer between the methyl and iodine fragments as a function of their interatomic separation set by the NIR–x-ray delay. We observe signatures of electron transfer for distances up to 20 angstroms and show that a realistic estimate of its effective spatial range can be obtained from a classical over-the-barrier model. The presented technique is applicable for spatiotemporal imaging of charge transfer dynamics in a wide range of molecular systems.


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.


Structural Dynamics | 2015

Communication: X-ray coherent diffractive imaging by immersion in nanodroplets

Rico Mayro P. Tanyag; Charles Bernando; Curtis Jones; Camila Bacellar; Ken R. Ferguson; Denis Anielski; Rebecca Boll; Sebastian Carron; James P. Cryan; Lars Englert; Sascha W. Epp; Benjamin Erk; Lutz Foucar; Luis F. Gomez; Robert Hartmann; Daniel M. Neumark; Daniel Rolles; Benedikt Rudek; Artem Rudenko; Katrin R. Siefermann; Joachim Ullrich; Fabian Weise; Christoph Bostedt; Oliver Gessner; Andrey F. Vilesov

Lensless x-ray microscopy requires the recovery of the phase of the radiation scattered from a specimen. Here, we demonstrate a de novo phase retrieval technique by encapsulating an object in a superfluid helium nanodroplet, which provides both a physical support and an approximate scattering phase for the iterative image reconstruction. The technique is robust, fast-converging, and yields the complex density of the immersed object. Images of xenon clusters embedded in superfluid helium droplets reveal transient configurations of quantum vortices in this fragile system.


XXIX INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PHOTONIC, ELECTRONIC, AND ATOMIC COLLISIONS (ICPEAC2015), PTS 1-12 | 2015

Diffraction effects in the Recoil-Frame Photoelectron Angular Distributions of Halomethanes

Cédric Bomme; Denis Anielski; Evgeny Savelyev; Rebecca Boll; Benjamin Erk; Sadia Bari; Jens Viefhaus; Mauro Stener; Piero Decleva; Daniel Rolles

Citation: Bomme, C., Anielski, D., Savelyev, E., Boll, R., Erk, B., Bari, S., . . . Rolles, D. (2015). Diffraction effects in the Recoil-Frame Photoelectron Angular Distributions of Halomethanes. 635(11). doi:10.1088/1742-6596/635/11/112020


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Femtosecond photoelectron diffraction: a new approach to image molecular structure during photochemical reactions

Daniel Rolles; Rebecca Boll; Samyak Tamrakar; Denis Anielski; Cédric Bomme

Continuing technical advances in the creation of (sub-) femtosecond VUV and X-ray pulses with Free-Electron Lasers and laser-based high-harmonic-generation sources have created new opportunities for studying ultrafast dynamics during chemical reactions. Here, we present an approach to image the geometric structure of gas-phase molecules with fewfemtosecond temporal and sub-Ångström spatial resolution using femtosecond photoelectron diffraction. This technique allows imaging the molecules “from within” by analyzing the diffraction of inner-shell photoelectrons that are created by femtosecond VUV and X-ray pulses. Using pump-probe schemes, ultrafast structural changes during photochemical reactions can thus be directly visualized with a temporal resolution that is only limited by the pulse durations of the pump and the probe pulse and the synchronization of the two light pulses. Here, we illustrate the principle of photoelectron diffraction using a simple, geometric scattering model and present results from photoelectron diffraction experiments on laser-aligned molecules using X-ray pulses from a Free-Electron Laser.


International Conference on Ultrafast Structural Dynamics | 2012

Time-Resolved Photoelectron Diffraction on Laser-Aligned Molecules

Denis Anielski; Rebecca Boll; Daniel Rolles

We present static and time-resolved photoelectron angular distributions of laser-aligned pFAB and OCS molecules photoionized by fs-FEL pulses. Dynamic structural changes of a molecule during Coulomb explosion were recorded.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2018

Photophysics of indole upon X-ray absorption

Thomas Kierspel; Cédric Bomme; Michele Di Fraia; Joss Wiese; Denis Anielski; Sadia Bari; Rebecca Boll; Benjamin Erk; Jens S. Kienitz; Nele L. M. Müller; Daniel Rolles; Jens Viefhaus; Sebastian Trippel; Jochen Küpper

A photofragmentation study of gas-phase indole (C8H7N) upon single-photon ionization at a photon energy of 420 eV is presented. Indole was primarily inner-shell ionized at its nitrogen and carbon 1s orbitals. Electrons and ions were measured in coincidence by means of velocity map imaging. The angular relationship between ionic fragments is discussed along with the possibility to use the angle-resolved coincidence detection to perform experiments on molecules that are strongly oriented in their recoil-frame. The coincident measurement of electrons and ions revealed fragmentation-pathway-dependent electron spectra, linking the structural fragmentation dynamics to different electronic excitations. Evidence for photoelectron-impact self-ionization was observed.


Frontiers in Optics 2012/Laser Science XXVIII (2012), paper LW2H.3 | 2012

Time-Resolved Photoelectron Diffraction of Laser-Aligned Molecules

Daniel Rolles; Rebecca Boll; Denis Anielski; Marcus Adolph; Andrew Aquila; Christoph Bostedt; John D. Bozek; Henry N. Chapman; Lauge Christensen; Ryan Coffee; Siarhei Dziarzhytski; A V Golovin; Per Johnsson; Jochen Küpper; Arnaud Rouzée; Artem Rudenko; Henrik Stapelfeldt; Simone Techert; M. J. J. Vrakking; Joachim Ullrich

Static and time-resolved photoelectron diffraction of laser-aligned polyatomic molecules photoionized by Free-Electron Laser pulses is presented. The results are a proof-of-principle for imaging dynamic structural changes in molecules with femtosecond temporal and Angstrom spatial resolution.

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Christoph Bostedt

Argonne National Laboratory

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John D. Bozek

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Ken R. Ferguson

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Camila Bacellar

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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