Kathrin Klünder
Lund University
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Featured researches published by Kathrin Klünder.
Physical Review Letters | 2011
Mathieu Gisselbrecht; Kathrin Klünder; Jessica Dahlstrom; Thomas Fordell; M. Swoboda; Diego Guenot; Per Johnsson; J. Caillat; Johan Mauritsson; Alfred Maquet; Richard Taïeb; Anne L'Huillier
We study photoionization of argon atoms excited by attosecond pulses using an interferometric measurement technique. We measure the difference in time delays between electrons emitted from the 3s(2) and from the 3p(6) shell, at different excitation energies ranging from 32 to 42 eV. The determination of photoemission time delays requires taking into account the measurement process, involving the interaction with a probing infrared field. This contribution can be estimated using a universal formula and is found to account for a substantial fraction of the measured delay.
Physical Review Letters | 2010
Johan Mauritsson; Thomas Remetter; M. Swoboda; Kathrin Klünder; Anne L'Huillier; K. J. Schafer; O. Ghafur; Freek Kelkensberg; W. Siu; Per Johnsson; M. J. J. Vrakking; Irina Znakovskaya; Thorsten Uphues; Sergey Zherebtsov; Matthias F. Kling; F. Lépine; E. Benedetti; Federico Ferrari; Giuseppe Sansone; M. Nisoli
We present an interferometric pump-probe technique for the characterization of attosecond electron wave packets (WPs) that uses a free WP as a reference to measure a bound WP. We demonstrate our method by exciting helium atoms using an attosecond pulse (AP) with a bandwidth centered near the ionization threshold, thus creating both a bound and a free WP simultaneously. After a variable delay, the bound WP is ionized by a few-cycle infrared laser precisely synchronized to the original AP. By measuring the delay-dependent photoelectron spectrum we obtain an interferogram that contains both quantum beats as well as multipath interference. Analysis of the interferogram allows us to determine the bound WP components with a spectral resolution much better than the inverse of the AP duration.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2009
Anders Mikkelsen; Jörg Schwenke; Thomas Fordell; Gang Luo; Kathrin Klünder; Emelie Hilner; Nicklas Anttu; Alexei Zakharov; Edvin Lundgren; Johan Mauritsson; Jesper N Andersen; Hongqi Xu; Anne L'Huillier
We report the first experiments carried out on a new imaging setup, which combines the high spatial resolution of a photoemission electron microscope (PEEM) with the temporal resolution of extreme ultraviolet (XUV) attosecond pulse trains. The very short pulses were provided by high-harmonic generation and used to illuminate lithographic structures and Au nanoparticles, which, in turn, were imaged with a PEEM resolving features below 300 nm. We argue that the spatial resolution is limited by the lack of electron energy filtering in this particular demonstration experiment. Problems with extensive space charge effects, which can occur due to the low probe pulse repetition rate and extremely short duration, are solved by reducing peak intensity while maintaining a sufficient average intensity to allow imaging. Finally, a powerful femtosecond infrared (IR) beam was combined with the XUV beam in a pump-probe setup where delays could be varied from subfemtoseconds to picoseconds. The IR pump beam could induce multiphoton electron emission in resonant features on the surface. The interaction between the electrons emitted by the pump and probe pulses could be observed.
Chemical Physics | 2013
J. Marcus Dahlström; Diego Guenot; Kathrin Klünder; Matthieu Gisselbrecht; Johan Mauritsson; Anne L'Huillier; Alfred Maquet; Richard Taïeb
We study the temporal aspects of laser-assisted extreme ultraviolet (XUV) photoionization using attosecond pulses of harmonic radiation. The aim of this paper is to establish the general form of th ...
Physical Review Letters | 2010
M. Swoboda; Thomas Fordell; Kathrin Klünder; Jessica Dahlstrom; Miguel Miranda; Christian Buth; K. J. Schafer; Johan Mauritsson; Anne L'Huillier; Mathieu Gisselbrecht
We study resonant two-color two-photon ionization of helium via the 1s3p (1)P(1) state. The first color is the 15th harmonic of a tunable Ti:sapphire laser, while the second color is the fundamental laser radiation. Our method uses phase-locked high-order harmonics to determine the phase of the two-photon process by interferometry. The measurement of the two-photon ionization phase variation as a function of detuning from the resonance and intensity of the dressing field allows us to determine the intensity dependence of the transition energy.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2010
Lasse Landt; Matthias Staiger; David Wolter; Kathrin Klünder; Peter Zimmermann; Trevor M. Willey; Tony van Buuren; Daniel E. Brehmer; Peter R. Schreiner; Boryslav A. Tkachenko; Andrey A. Fokin; T. Möller; Christoph Bostedt
At the nanoscale, the surface becomes pivotal for the properties of semiconductors due to an increased surface-to-bulk ratio. Surface functionalization is a means to include semiconductor nanocrystals into devices. In this comprehensive experimental study we determine in detail the effect of a single thiol functional group on the electronic and optical properties of the hydrogen-passivated nanodiamond adamantane. We find that the optical properties of the diamondoid are strongly affected due to a drastic change in the occupied states. Compared to adamantane, the optical gap in adamantane-1-thiol is lowered by approximately 0.6 eV and UV luminescence is quenched. The lowest unoccupied states remain delocalized at the cluster surface leaving the diamondoids negative electron affinity intact.
european quantum electronics conference | 2009
Johan Mauritsson; Thomas Remetter; M. Swoboda; Kathrin Klünder; Anne L'Huillier; Kenneth J. Schafer; O. Ghafur; F. Kelkensberg; W. Siu; Per Johnsson; Marc J. J. Vrakking; Irina Znakovskaya; T. Uphues; Sergey Zherebtsov; Matthias F. Kling; F. Lépine; E. Benedetti; F. Ferrari; Giuseppe Sansone; M. Nisoli
The basic properties of atoms, molecules, and solids are governed by ultrafast electron dynamics. Attosecond pulses bear the promise to resolve these electronic dynamics on their natural time scale, the atomic unit of time, which is 24 attoseconds. The high frequency of the pulses, however, means that in most of the experiments performed so far the electrons that are excited by attosecond pulses are directly moved into the ionization continuum, where they rapidly disperse [1,2]. More interesting dynamics arise when electrons are excited into bound [3] or autoionizing states [4]. Here we present a method to determine the dynamics of a bound wave packet excited by an attosecond pulse, while - for the first time - keeping track of its spectral content with high precision. The key idea is that coincident with the creation of the bound wave packet, we also launch a broad continuum wave packet (Fig. 1). This free wave packet serves as a reference when, after a variable delay, the bound wave packet is ionized by a 7 fs infrared laser pulse, locked in phase with the bound wave packet. The interference fringes observed in the photoelectron spectrum enable precise determination of the bound electron wave packet. As in Ramsey spectroscopy, the spectral precision is here set not by the bandwidth of the excitation pulse, but by the delay between the pump and probe pulses as well as the experimental energy resolution of the photoelectron spectrometer used.
Physical Review Letters | 2009
Lasse Landt; Kathrin Klünder; Jeremy E. Dahl; Robert M. Carlson; T. Möller; Christoph Bostedt
Physical Review Letters | 2013
Ch. Neidel; J. Klei; C-H. Yang; Arnaud Rouzée; M. J. J. Vrakking; Kathrin Klünder; Miguel Miranda; Cord L. Arnold; Thomas Fordell; Anne L'Huillier; Mathieu Gisselbrecht; Per Johnsson; M. P. Dinh; E. Suraud; P-G. Reinhard; Victor Despré; M. A. L. Marques; F. Lépine
Physical Review A | 2012
Diego Guenot; Kathrin Klünder; Cord L. Arnold; David Kroon; Jan Marcus Dahlström; Miguel Miranda; Thomas Fordell; Mathieu Gisselbrecht; Per Johnsson; Johan Mauritsson; Eva Lindroth; Alfred Maquet; Richard Taïeb; Anne L'Huillier; As Kheifets