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Dive into the research topics where H.-K. Kim is active.

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Featured researches published by H.-K. Kim.


Nature Communications | 2013

Understanding the role of phase in chemical bond breaking with coincidence angular streaking

Jian Wu; Maia Magrakvelidze; L. Schmidt; Maksim Kunitski; Thomas Pfeifer; M. Schöffler; M. Pitzer; Martin Richter; S. Voss; H. Sann; H.-K. Kim; J. Lower; T. Jahnke; A. Czasch; Uwe Thumm; R. Dörner

Electron motion in chemical bonds occurs on an attosecond timescale. This ultrafast motion can be driven by strong laser fields. Ultrashort asymmetric laser pulses are known to direct electrons to a certain direction. But do symmetric laser pulses destroy symmetry in breaking chemical bonds? Here we answer this question in the affirmative by employing a two-particle coincidence technique to investigate the ionization and fragmentation of H₂ by a long circularly polarized multicycle femtosecond laser pulse. Angular streaking and the coincidence detection of electrons and ions are employed to recover the phase of the electric field, at the instant of ionization and in the molecular frame, revealing a phase-dependent anisotropy in the angular distribution of H⁺ fragments. Our results show that electron localization and asymmetrical breaking of molecular bonds are ubiquitous, even in symmetric laser pulses. The technique we describe is robust and provides a powerful tool for ultrafast science.


Nature | 2014

Resonant Auger decay driving intermolecular Coulombic decay in molecular dimers

F. Trinter; M. Schöffler; H.-K. Kim; F. Sturm; K. Cole; N. Neumann; A. Vredenborg; Joshua Williams; I. Bocharova; Renaud Guillemin; Marc Simon; A. Belkacem; Allen Lee Landers; Th. Weber; H. Schmidt-Böcking; R. Dörner; T. Jahnke

In 1997, it was predicted that an electronically excited atom or molecule placed in a loosely bound chemical system (such as a hydrogen-bonded or van-der-Waals-bonded cluster) could efficiently decay by transferring its excess energy to a neighbouring species that would then emit a low-energy electron. This intermolecular Coulombic decay (ICD) process has since been shown to be a common phenomenon, raising questions about its role in DNA damage induced by ionizing radiation, in which low-energy electrons are known to play an important part. It was recently suggested that ICD can be triggered efficiently and site-selectively by resonantly core-exciting a target atom, which then transforms through Auger decay into an ionic species with sufficiently high excitation energy to permit ICD to occur. Here we show experimentally that resonant Auger decay can indeed trigger ICD in dimers of both molecular nitrogen and carbon monoxide. By using ion and electron momentum spectroscopy to measure simultaneously the charged species created in the resonant-Auger-driven ICD cascade, we find that ICD occurs in less time than the 20 femtoseconds it would take for individual molecules to undergo dissociation. Our experimental confirmation of this process and its efficiency may trigger renewed efforts to develop resonant X-ray excitation schemes for more localized and targeted cancer radiation therapy.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Multiorbital Tunneling Ionization of the CO Molecule

Jian Wu; L. Schmidt; Maksim Kunitski; M. Meckel; S. Voss; H. Sann; H.-K. Kim; T. Jahnke; A. Czasch; R. Dörner

We coincidently measure the molecular-frame photoelectron angular distribution and the ion sum-momentum distribution of single and double ionization of CO molecules by using circularly and elliptically polarized femtosecond laser pulses, respectively. The orientation dependent ionization rates for various kinetic energy releases allow us to individually identify the ionizations of multiple orbitals, ranging from the highest occupied to the next two lower-lying molecular orbitals for various channels observed in our experiments. Not only the emission of a single electron, but also the sequential tunneling dynamics of two electrons from multiple orbitals are traced step by step. Our results confirm that the shape of the ionizing orbitals determine the strong laser field tunneling ionization in the CO molecule, whereas the linear Stark effect plays a minor role.


Nature Communications | 2012

Probing the tunnelling site of electrons in strong field enhanced ionization of molecules

Jian Wu; M. Meckel; L. Ph. H. Schmidt; Maksim Kunitski; S. Voss; H. Sann; H.-K. Kim; T. Jahnke; A. Czasch; R. Dörner

Molecules show a much increased multiple ionization rate in a strong laser field as compared with atoms of similar ionization energy. A widely accepted model attributes this to the action of the joint fields of the adjacent ionic core and the laser on its neighbour inside the same molecule. The underlying physical picture for the enhanced ionization is that it is the up-field atom that gets ionized. However, this is still debated and remains unproven. Here we report an experimental verification of this long-standing prediction. This is accomplished by probing the two-site double ionization of ArXe, where the instantaneous field direction at the moment of electron release and the emission direction of the correlated ionizing centre are measured by detecting the recoil sum- and relative-momenta of the fragment ions. Our results unambiguously prove the intuitive picture of the enhanced multielectron dissociative ionization of molecules and clarify a long-standing controversy.


Journal of Physics B | 2008

Localization of inner-shell photoelectron emission and interatomic Coulombic decay in Ne2

K. Kreidi; T. Jahnke; Th. Weber; T. Havermeier; R. E. Grisenti; Y. Morisita; S. Schössler; L. Ph. H. Schmidt; M. Schöffler; M. Odenweller; N. Neumann; L. Foucar; J. Titze; B. Ulrich; F. Sturm; C. Stuck; R. Wallauer; S. Voss; I. Lauter; H.-K. Kim; M. Rudloff; H. Fukuzawa; G. Prümper; Norio Saito; K. Ueda; A. Czasch; O. Jagutzki; H. Schmidt-Böcking; S. K. Semenov; N. A. Cherepkov

We used cold target recoil ion momentum spectroscopy (COLTRIMS) to investigate the decay of Ne2 after K-shell photoionization. The breakup into Ne1+/Ne2+ shows interatomic Coulombic decay (ICD) occurring after a preceding atomic Auger decay. The molecular frame angular distributions of the photoelectron and the ICD electron show distinct, asymmetric features, which imply localization of the K-vacancy created at one of the two atomic sites of the Ne2 and an emission of the ICD electron from a localized site. The experimental results are supported by calculations in the frozen core Hartree–Fock 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 | 2011

Enhanced production of low energy electrons by alpha particle impact

H.-K. Kim; J. Titze; M. Schöffler; F. Trinter; M. Waitz; J. Voigtsberger; H. Sann; M. Meckel; Christian Stuck; Ute Lenz; Matthias Odenweller; N. Neumann; S. Schössler; B. Ulrich; Rui Costa Fraga; Nikos Petridis; D. Metz; Annika Jung; R. E. Grisenti; A. Czasch; O. Jagutzki; L. Schmidt; T. Jahnke; H. Schmidt-Böcking; R. Dörner

Radiation damage to living tissue stems not only from primary ionizing particles but to a substantial fraction from the dissociative attachment of secondary electrons with energies below the ionization threshold. We show that the emission yield of those low energy electrons increases dramatically in ion–atom collisions depending on whether or not the target atoms are isolated or embedded in an environment. Only when the atom that has been ionized and excited by the primary particle impact is in immediate proximity of another atom is a fragmentation route known as interatomic Coulombic decay (ICD) enabled. This leads to the emission of a low energy electron. Over the past decade ICD was explored in several experiments following photoionization. Most recent results show its observation even in water clusters. Here we show the quantitative role of ICD for the production of low energy electrons by ion impact, thus approaching a scenario closer to that of radiation damage by alpha particles: We choose ion energies on the maximum of the Bragg peak where energy is most efficiently deposited in tissue. We compare the electron production after colliding He+ ions on isolated Ne atoms and on Ne dimers (Ne2). In the latter case the Ne atom impacted is surrounded by a most simple environment already opening ICD as a deexcitation channel. As a consequence, we find a dramatically enhanced low energy electron yield. The results suggest that ICD may have a significant influence on cell survival after exposure to ionizing radiation.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Agreement of Experiment and Theory on the Single Ionization of Helium by Fast Proton Impact

H. Gassert; O Chuluunbaatar; M. Waitz; F. Trinter; H.-K. Kim; Tobias Bauer; Alina Laucke; C. Müller; J. Voigtsberger; M. Weller; J. Rist; M. Pitzer; S. Zeller; T. Jahnke; L. Ph. H. Schmidt; J. B. Williams; S. A. Zaytsev; A. A. Bulychev; Konstantin A. Kouzakov; H. Schmidt-Böcking; R. Dörner; Yu. V. Popov; M. Schöffler

Even though the study of ion-atom collisions is a mature field of atomic physics, large discrepancies between experiment and theoretical calculations are still common. Here we present experimental results with high momentum resolution on the single ionization of helium induced by 1-MeV protons, and we compare these to theoretical calculations. The overall agreement is strikingly good, and even the first Born approximation yields good agreement between theory and experiment. This has been expected for several decades, but so far has not been accomplished. The influence of projectile coherence effects on the measured data is briefly discussed in terms of an ongoing dispute on the existence of nodal structures in the electron angular emission distributions.


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


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2017

Observation of Enhanced Chiral Asymmetries in the Inner-Shell Photoionization of Uniaxially Oriented Methyloxirane Enantiomers

Maurice Tia; M. Pitzer; Gregor Kastirke; Janine Gatzke; H.-K. Kim; F. Trinter; J. Rist; Alexander Hartung; Daniel Trabert; Juliane Siebert; Kevin Henrichs; Jasper Becht; S. Zeller; H. Gassert; Florian Wiegandt; R. Wallauer; Andreas Kuhlins; C. Schober; Tobias Bauer; Natascha Wechselberger; Phillip Burzynski; Jonathan Neff; M. Weller; D. Metz; Max Kircher; M. Waitz; Joshua Williams; L. Schmidt; Anne D. Müller; André Knie

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T. Jahnke

Goethe University Frankfurt

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M. Schöffler

Goethe University Frankfurt

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R. Dörner

Goethe University Frankfurt

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A. Czasch

Goethe University Frankfurt

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N. Neumann

Goethe University Frankfurt

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J. Titze

Goethe University Frankfurt

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L. Ph. H. Schmidt

Goethe University Frankfurt

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F. Trinter

Goethe University Frankfurt

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B. Ulrich

Goethe University Frankfurt

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M. Waitz

Goethe University Frankfurt

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