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Dive into the research topics where Hans Jakob Wörner is active.

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Featured researches published by Hans Jakob Wörner.


Nature | 2010

Following a chemical reaction using high-harmonic interferometry

Hans Jakob Wörner; J. B. Bertrand; Daniil Kartashov; P. B. Corkum; D. M. Villeneuve

The study of chemical reactions on the molecular (femtosecond) timescale typically uses pump laser pulses to excite molecules and subsequent probe pulses to interrogate them. The ultrashort pump pulse can excite only a small fraction of molecules, and the probe wavelength must be carefully chosen to discriminate between excited and unexcited molecules. The past decade has seen the emergence of new methods that are also aimed at imaging chemical reactions as they occur, based on X-ray diffraction, electron diffraction or laser-induced recollision—with spectral selection not available for any of these new methods. Here we show that in the case of high-harmonic spectroscopy based on recollision, this apparent limitation becomes a major advantage owing to the coherent nature of the attosecond high-harmonic pulse generation. The coherence allows the unexcited molecules to act as local oscillators against which the dynamics are observed, so a transient grating technique can be used to reconstruct the amplitude and phase of emission from the excited molecules. We then extract structural information from the amplitude, which encodes the internuclear separation, by quantum interference at short times and by scattering of the recollision electron at longer times. The phase records the attosecond dynamics of the electrons, giving access to the evolving ionization potentials and the electronic structure of the transient molecule. In our experiment, we are able to document a temporal shift of the high-harmonic field of less than an attosecond (1 as = 10−18 s) between the stretched and compressed geometry of weakly vibrationally excited Br2 in the electronic ground state. The ability to probe structural and electronic features, combined with high time resolution, make high-harmonic spectroscopy ideally suited to measuring coupled electronic and nuclear dynamics occurring in photochemical reactions and to characterizing the electronic structure of transition states.


Science | 2015

Measurement and laser control of attosecond charge migration in ionized iodoacetylene.

Peter M. Kraus; Benoît Mignolet; Denitsa Baykusheva; Alisa Rupenyan; Lubos Horný; Emmanuel Fowe Penka; Guido Grassi; Oleg I. Tolstikhin; Johannes Schneider; Frank Jensen; Lars Bojer Madsen; André D. Bandrauk; Françoise Remacle; Hans Jakob Wörner

Electronic movement flashing into view Numerous chemical processes begin with ionization: the ejection of an electron from a molecule. What happens in the immediate aftermath of that event? Kraus et al. explored this question in iodoacetylene by detecting and analyzing the spectrum of emitted high harmonics (see the Perspective by Ueda). They traced the migration of the residual positively charged hole along the molecular axis on a time scale faster than a quadrillionth of a second. They thereby characterized the capacity of a laser field to steer the holes motion in appropriately oriented molecules. Science, this issue p. 790; see also p. 740 High harmonics reveal fine details of electronic rearrangement in a molecule in the first instants after ionization. [Also see Perspective by Ueda] The ultrafast motion of electrons and holes after light-matter interaction is fundamental to a broad range of chemical and biophysical processes. We advanced high-harmonic spectroscopy to resolve spatially and temporally the migration of an electron hole immediately after ionization of iodoacetylene while simultaneously demonstrating extensive control over the process. A multidimensional approach, based on the measurement and accurate theoretical description of both even and odd harmonic orders, enabled us to reconstruct both quantum amplitudes and phases of the electronic states with a resolution of ~100 attoseconds. We separately reconstructed quasi–field-free and laser-controlled charge migration as a function of the spatial orientation of the molecule and determined the shape of the hole created by ionization. Our technique opens the prospect of laser control over electronic primary processes.


Science | 2011

Conical Intersection Dynamics in NO2 Probed by Homodyne High-Harmonic Spectroscopy

Hans Jakob Wörner; J. B. Bertrand; B. Fabre; J. Higuet; H. Ruf; A. Dubrouil; Serguei Patchkovskii; M. Spanner; Y. Mairesse; Valérie Blanchet; Eric Mevel; E. Constant; P. B. Corkum; D. M. Villeneuve

Coincident vibrational and electronic rearrangements in a photoexcited molecule are tracked in fine detail. Conical intersections play a crucial role in the chemistry of most polyatomic molecules, ranging from the simplest bimolecular reactions to the photostability of DNA. The real-time study of the associated electronic dynamics poses a major challenge to the latest techniques of ultrafast measurement. We show that high-harmonic spectroscopy reveals oscillations in the electronic character that occur in nitrogen dioxide when a photoexcited wave packet crosses a conical intersection. At longer delays, we observe the onset of statistical dissociation dynamics. The present results demonstrate that high-harmonic spectroscopy could become a powerful tool to highlight electronic dynamics occurring along nonadiabatic chemical reaction pathways.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2013

A new endstation at the Swiss Light Source for ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and X-ray absorption spectroscopy measurements of liquid solutions.

Matthew A. Brown; Amaia Beloqui Redondo; Inga Jordan; Nicolas Duyckaerts; Ming-Tao Lee; Markus Ammann; Frithjof Nolting; Armin Kleibert; Thomas Huthwelker; Jean-Pierre Mächler; Mario Birrer; Juri Honegger; Reto Wetter; Hans Jakob Wörner; Jeroen A. van Bokhoven

A new liquid microjet endstation designed for ultraviolet (UPS) and X-ray (XPS) photoelectron, and partial electron yield X-ray absorption (XAS) spectroscopies at the Swiss Light Source is presented. The new endstation, which is based on a Scienta HiPP-2 R4000 electron spectrometer, is the first liquid microjet endstation capable of operating in vacuum and in ambient pressures up to the equilibrium vapor pressure of liquid water at room temperature. In addition, the Scienta HiPP-2 R4000 energy analyzer of this new endstation allows for XPS measurements up to 7000 eV electron kinetic energy that will enable electronic structure measurements of bulk solutions and buried interfaces from liquid microjet samples. The endstation is designed to operate at the soft X-ray SIM beamline and at the tender X-ray Phoenix beamline. The endstation can also be operated using a Scienta 5 K ultraviolet helium lamp for dedicated UPS measurements at the vapor-liquid interface using either He I or He II α lines. The design concept, first results from UPS, soft X-ray XPS, and partial electron yield XAS measurements, and an outlook to the potential of this endstation are presented.


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2017

Time-resolved X-ray absorption spectroscopy with a water-window high-harmonic source

Yoann Pertot; Cédric Schmidt; Mary Matthews; Adrien Chauvet; Martin Huppert; Vit Svoboda; Aaron von Conta; Andres Tehlar; Denitsa Baykusheva; Jean-Pierre Wolf; Hans Jakob Wörner

An x-ray view of C–F and S–F bond breaks X-ray absorption spectroscopy is a useful probe of element-specific dynamics in molecular reactions. However, the required x-ray fluxes have rarely been available outside expensive dedicated facilities such as synchrotrons. Pertot et al. developed a tabletop laser-based high-harmonic source that extends far enough into the x-ray region to probe carbon K-edge and sulfur L-edge absorptions with femtosecond temporal resolution. They used this source to track the previously elusive dissociative dynamics of gaseous carbon tetrafluoride and sulfur hexafluoride after laser-induced ionization. Science, this issue p. 264 Ultrafast x-ray absorption spectroscopy at carbon and sulfur frequencies tracks dissociative dynamics of CF4+ and SF6+. Time-resolved x-ray absorption spectroscopy (TR-XAS) has so far practically been limited to large-scale facilities, to subpicosecond temporal resolution, and to the condensed phase. We report the realization of TR-XAS with a temporal resolution in the low femtosecond range by developing a tabletop high-harmonic source reaching up to 350 electron volts, thus partially covering the spectral region of 280 to 530 electron volts, where water is transmissive. We used this source to follow previously unexamined light-induced chemical reactions in the lowest electronic states of isolated CF4+ and SF6+ molecules in the gas phase. By probing element-specific core-to-valence transitions at the carbon K-edge or the sulfur L-edges, we characterized their reaction paths and observed the effect of symmetry breaking through the splitting of absorption bands and Rydberg-valence mixing induced by the geometry changes.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Bicircular High-Harmonic Spectroscopy Reveals Dynamical Symmetries of Atoms and Molecules.

Denitsa Baykusheva; Sabbir Ahsan; Nan Lin; Hans Jakob Wörner

We introduce bicircular high-harmonic spectroscopy as a new method to probe dynamical symmetries of atoms and molecules and their evolution in time. Our approach is based on combining a circularly polarized femtosecond fundamental field of frequency ω with its counterrotating second harmonic 2ω. We demonstrate the ability of bicircular high-harmonic spectroscopy to characterize the orbital angular momentum symmetry of atomic orbitals. We further show that breaking the threefold rotational symmetry of the generating medium-at the level of either the ensemble or that of a single molecule-results in the emission of the otherwise parity-forbidden frequencies 3qω  (q∈N), which provide a background-free probe of dynamical molecular symmetries.


Langmuir | 2013

Effect of Surface Charge Density on the Affinity of Oxide Nanoparticles for the Vapor–Water Interface

Matthew A. Brown; Nicolas Duyckaerts; Amaia Beloqui Redondo; Inga Jordan; Frithjof Nolting; Armin Kleibert; Markus Ammann; Hans Jakob Wörner; Jeroen A. van Bokhoven; Zareen Abbas

Using in-situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy at the vapor-water interface, the affinity of nanometer-sized silica colloids to adsorb at the interface is shown to depend on colloid surface charge density. In aqueous suspensions at pH 10 corrected Debye-Hückel theory for surface complexation calculations predict that smaller silica colloids have increased negative surface charge density that originates from enhanced screening of deprotonated silanol groups (≡Si-O(-)) by counterions in the condensed ion layer. The increased negative surface charge density results in an electrostatic repulsion from the vapor-water interface that is seen to a lesser extent for larger particles that have a reduced charge density in the XPS measurements. We compare the results and interpretation of the in-situ XPS and corrected Debye-Hückel theory for surface complexation calculations with traditional surface tension measurements. Our results show that controlling the surface charge density of colloid particles can regulate their adsorption to the interface between two dielectrics.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2007

Jahn-Teller effect in tetrahedral symmetry: Large-amplitude tunneling motion and rovibronic structure of CH4+ and CD4+

Hans Jakob Wörner; X. Qian; F. Merkt

The energy level structures of the ground vibronic states of 12CH4+, 13CH4+, and 12CD4+ have been measured by pulsed-field-ionization zero-kinetic-energy photoelectron spectroscopy. The nuclear spin symmetries of the tunneling-rotational levels have been determined in double-resonance experiments via selected rotational levels of the v3=1 and v3=2 vibrational levels of the X 1A1 ground state of CH4. The energy level structures of 12CH4+, 13CH4+, and 12CD4+ have been analyzed with an effective tunneling-rotational Hamiltonian. The analysis together with a group theoretical treatment of the Tx(e+t2) Jahn-Teller effect in the Td(M) group prove that the equilibrium geometry of 12CH4+, 13CH4+, and 12CD4+ has C2v symmetry and characterize the pseudorotational dynamics in these fluxional cations. The tunneling behavior is discussed in terms of the relevant properties of the potential energy surface, some of which have been recalculated at the CCSD(T)/cc-pVTZ level of ab initio theory.


Physical Review A | 2012

Intensity dependence of multiple orbital contributions and shape resonance in high-order harmonic generation of aligned N2 molecules

Cheng Jin; J. B. Bertrand; Robert R. Lucchese; Hans Jakob Wörner; P. B. Corkum; D. M. Villeneuve; Anh-Thu Le; C. D. Lin

We report measurements and theoretical simulations of high-order harmonic generation (HHG) in aligned N


european quantum electronics conference | 2017

Attosecond delays in molecular photoionization

Martin Hupperrt; Inga Jordan; Denitsa Baykusheva; Aaron von Conta; Hans Jakob Wörner

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P. B. Corkum

National Research Council

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Peter M. Kraus

University of California

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J. B. Bertrand

National Research Council

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