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Dive into the research topics where M. C. Simon is active.

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Featured researches published by M. C. Simon.


Nature | 2012

An unexpectedly low oscillator strength as the origin of the Fe xvii emission problem

Sven Bernitt; G. V. Brown; Jan K. Rudolph; René Friedrich Steinbrügge; A. Graf; Marcel Leutenegger; Sascha W. Epp; Sita Eberle; K. Kubicek; V. Mäckel; M. C. Simon; E. Träbert; E. W. Magee; C. Beilmann; N. Hell; S. Schippers; A. Müller; S. M. Kahn; A. Surzhykov; Zoltan Harman; Christoph H. Keitel; J. Clementson; F. S. Porter; W. F. Schlotter; J. J. Turner; Joachim Ullrich; P. Beiersdorfer; J. R. Crespo López-Urrutia

Highly charged iron (Fe16+, here referred to as Feu2009xvii) produces some of the brightest X-ray emission lines from hot astrophysical objects, including galaxy clusters and stellar coronae, and it dominates the emission of the Sun at wavelengths near 15 ångströms. The Feu2009xvii spectrum is, however, poorly fitted by even the best astrophysical models. A particular problem has been that the intensity of the strongest Feu2009xvii line is generally weaker than predicted. This has affected the interpretation of observations by the Chandra and XMM-Newton orbiting X-ray missions, fuelling a continuing controversy over whether this discrepancy is caused by incomplete modelling of the plasma environment in these objects or by shortcomings in the treatment of the underlying atomic physics. Here we report the results of an experiment in which a target of iron ions was induced to fluoresce by subjecting it to femtosecond X-ray pulses from a free-electron laser; our aim was to isolate a key aspect of the quantum mechanical description of the line emission. Surprisingly, we find a relative oscillator strength that is unexpectedly low, differing by 3.6σ from the best quantum mechanical calculations. Our measurements suggest that the poor agreement is rooted in the quality of the underlying atomic wavefunctions rather than in insufficient modelling of collisional processes.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2009

EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATIONS OF ION CHARGE DISTRIBUTIONS, EFFECTIVE ELECTRON DENSITIES, AND ELECTRON-ION CLOUD OVERLAP IN ELECTRON BEAM ION TRAP PLASMA USING EXTREME-ULTRAVIOLET SPECTROSCOPY

G. Y. Liang; J. R. Crespo López-Urrutia; T. Baumann; Sascha W. Epp; A. Gonchar; A. Lapierre; P. H. Mokler; M. C. Simon; H. Tawara; V. Mäckel; K. Yao; G. Zhao; Y. Zou; J. Ullrich

Spectra in the extreme ultraviolet range from 107 to 353 A emitted from Fe ions in various ionization stages have been observed at the Heidelberg electron beam ion trap (EBIT) with a flat-field grating spectrometer. A series of transition lines and their intensities have been analyzed and compared with collisional-radiative simulations. The present collisional-radiative model reproduces well the relative line intensities and facilitates line identification of ions produced in the EBIT. The polarization effect on the line intensities resulting from nonthermal unidirectional electron impact was explored and found to be significant (up to 24%) for a few transition lines. Based upon the observed line intensities, relative charge state distributions (CSD) of ions were determined, which peaked at Fe23+ tailing toward lower charge states. Another simulation on ion charge distributions including the ionization and electron capture processes generated CSDs which are in general agreement with the measurements. By observing intensity ratios of specific lines from levels collisionally populated directly from the ground state and those starting from the metastable levels of Fe XXI, Fe X and other ionic states, the effective electron densities were extracted and found to depend on the ionic charge. Furthermore, it was found that the overlap of the ion cloud with the electron beam estimated from the effective electron densities strongly depends on the charge state of the ion considered, i.e. under the same EBIT conditions, higher charge ions show less expansion in the radial direction.


Radiation Effects and Defects in Solids | 2007

Creation of surface nanostructures by irradiation with slow, highly charged ions

A.S. El-Said; W. Meissl; M. C. Simon; J. R. Crespo López-Urrutia; Ille C. Gebeshuber; J. Laimer; H. P. Winter; J. Ullrich; F. Aumayr

It has recently been demonstrated that slow (v < < 1 a.u.) highly charged ions (HCIs) are able to generate nano-sized hillocks on cleaved CaF2(1 1 1) surfaces. The aim of the present study was to explore whether surface nanostructures can also be formed on other target materials by the impact of slow HCIs. To this purpose, we have irradiated LiF(0 0 1), diamond-like carbon (DLC) and Au(1 1 1) with slow Xe HCIs (up to charge state 44+) from the Heidelberg electron beam ion trap. After irradiation, the crystals were investigated by scanning force microscopy. Nanometric hillocks protruding from the surface were found in the topographic images for the case of Xe q+ on LiF(0 0 1) for charge states q ≥ 28, but not for DLC and Au(1 1 1).


Journal of Physics B | 2010

Photoionization of N3 + and Ar8 + in an electron beam ion trap by synchrotron radiation

M. C. Simon; M. Schwarz; Sascha W. Epp; C. Beilmann; B. L. Schmitt; Zoltan Harman; T. Baumann; P. H. Mokler; Sven Bernitt; R. Ginzel; Stuart G. Higgins; Christoph H. Keitel; R Klawitter; K. Kubicek; V. Mäckel; J. Ullrich; J. R. Crespo López-Urrutia

Photoionization (PI) of multiply and highly charged ions was studied using an electron beam ion trap and synchrotron radiation at the BESSY II electron storage ring. The versatile new method introduced here extends the range of ions accessible for PI investigations beyond current limitations by providing a dense target of ions in arbitrary, i.e. both low and high charge states. Data on near-threshold PI of N3 + and Ar8 + ions, species of astrophysical and fundamental interest, show high resolution and accuracy allowing various theoretical models to be distinguished, and highlight shortcomings of available PI calculations. We compare our experimental data with our new fully relativistic PI calculations within a multiconfiguration Dirac?Fock approach and with other advanced calculations and find generally good agreement; however, detailed examination reveals significant deviations, especially at the threshold region of Ar8 +.


Journal of Physics B | 2010

X-ray laser spectroscopy of highly charged ions at FLASH

Sascha W. Epp; J. R. Crespo López-Urrutia; M. C. Simon; T. Baumann; G. Brenner; R. Ginzel; N. Guerassimova; V. Mäckel; P. H. Mokler; B. L. Schmitt; H. Tawara; Joachim Ullrich

Laser spectroscopy, widely applied in physics and chemistry, is extended into the soft x-ray region for the first time. Resonant fluorescence excitation of highly charged ions (HCIs) by soft x-ray free-electron lasers (FELs) shows here the potential for unprecedented precision on photonic transitions hitherto out of reach. The novel experiments combine an electron beam ion trap (EBIT) with the Free-electron LASer at Hamburg (FLASH) to measure resonant fluorescence by trapped HCIs as a function of the lasers wavelength. The present experiments have already reached the performance of conventional soft and hard x-ray spectroscopy. We present the results obtained for three fundamental and theoretically challenging transitions in Li-like ions, namely 1s22s?2S1/2?1s22p?2P1/2 in Fe23+ at 48.6 eV, in Cu26+ at 55.2 eV and 1s22s?2S1/2?1s22p?2P3/2 in Fe23+ at 65.3 eV. The latter demonstrates laser spectroscopy of multiply or HCIs at more than one order of magnitude higher energies than hitherto reported. Resolving power leading to relative precision up to 6 parts-per-million points to the possibility of providing an atomic absolute wavelength standard in this spectral region, which is still lacking.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2009

On the Transition Rate of the Fe x Red Coronal Line

G. Brenner; J. R. Crespo López-Urrutia; Sven Bernitt; D. Fischer; R. Ginzel; K. Kubicek; V. Mäckel; P. H. Mokler; M. C. Simon; J. Ullrich

We present a lifetime measurement of the 3s 23p 5 2 Po 1/2 first excited fine-structure level of the ground state configuration in chlorine-like Fe X, which relaxes to the ground state through a magnetic dipole (M1) transition (the so-called red coronal line) with a wavelength accurately determined to 637.454(1) nm. Moreover, the Zeeman splitting of line was observed. The lifetime of 14.2(2) ms is the most precise one measured in the red wavelength region and agrees well with advanced theoretical predictions and an empirically scaled interpolation based on experimental values from the same isoelectronic sequence.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2007

Compact soft x-ray spectrometer for plasma diagnostics at the Heidelberg Electron Beam Ion Trap

A. Lapierre; J. R. Crespo López-Urrutia; T. Baumann; Sascha W. Epp; A. Gonchar; A. J. González Martínez; G. Y. Liang; A. Rohr; R. Soria Orts; M. C. Simon; H. Tawara; R. Versteegen; J. Ullrich

A compact flat-field soft x-ray grazing-incidence grating spectrometer equipped with a cryogenically cooled back-illuminated charge-coupled device camera was built and implemented at the Heidelberg Electron Beam Ion Trap. The instrument spans the spectral region from 1 to 37 nm using two different gratings. In slitless operation mode, it directly images a radiation source, in this case ions confined in an electron beam ion trap, with high efficiency and reaching hereby a resolving power of lambda/Deltalambda approximately =130 at 2 nm and of lambda/Deltalambda approximately =600 at 28 nm. Capable of automatized operation, its low noise and excellent stability make it an ideal instrument not only for spectroscopic diagnostics requiring wide spectral coverage but also for precision wavelength measurements.


XXVI International Conference on Photonic, Electronic and Atomic Collisions | 2009

Photoionization of ions in arbitrary charge states by synchrotron radiation in an electron beam ion trap

M. C. Simon; M. Schwarz; B. L. Schmitt; C. Beilmann; Sascha W. Epp; T. Baumann; K. Kubicek; R. Ginzel; Stuart G. Higgins; R. Klawitter; V. Mäckel; Sven Bernitt; P. H. Mokler; J. Ullrich; J. R. Crespo López-Urrutia

Photoionization of ions in various charge states is studied with an electron beam ion trap at the synchrotron BESSY II. The ion target density achieved by this method, representing an increase of up to four orders of magnitude with respect to conventional techniques, gives unprecedented access to photoionization of highly charged ions at photon energies reaching the keV range. Data on near-threshold photoionization of N3+, Ar12+, Fe12+ combined with measurements on neutral gas targets in the same setup demonstrate the versatility of this technique and show both very good resolution and accuracy.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2006

Novel method for unambiguous ion identification in mixed ion beams extracted from an electron beam ion trap

W. Meissl; M. C. Simon; J. R. Crespo López-Urrutia; H. Tawara; J. Ullrich; H. P. Winter; F. Aumayr

A novel technique to identify small fluxes of mixed highly charged ion beams extracted from an Electron Beam Ion Trap (EBIT) is presented and practically demonstrated. The method exploits projectile charge state dependent potential emission of electrons as induced by ion impact on a metal surface to separate ions with identical or very similar mass-to-charge ratio. * corresponding author e-mail: [email protected] Tel.: +43 1 58801 13430, Fax: +43 1 58801 13499 postal address: Institut f. Allgemeine Physik, TU Wien, Wiedner Haupstr. 8-10/E134, A-1040 Vienna, Austria


27th International Conference on Photonic, Electronic and Atomic Collisions (ICPEAC 2011) | 2012

X-ray laser spectroscopy with an electron beam ion trap at the free electron laser LCLS

Sven Bernitt; G. V. Brown; J. R. Crespo López Urrutia; Jan K. Rudolph; René Friedrich Steinbrügge; A. Graf; Maurice A. Leutenegger; C. Beilmann; Sita Eberle; Sascha W. Epp; K. Kubicek; V. Mäckel; S. Schippers; W. F. Schlotter; M. C. Simon; E. Träbert; J. J. Turner; S. M. Kahn; E. W. Magee; A. Müller; F. S. Porter; A Rasmussen; P. Beiersdorfer; Joachim Ullrich

We present a first laser spectroscopy experiment in the keV energy regime, performed at the Free-Electron Laser LCLS at Stanford. An electron beam ion trap was used to provide a target of highly charged O, F and Fe ions. The resonant fluorescence spectra obtained for various transitions were calibrated to simultaneously measured Lyman lines of hydrogenic ions.

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F. Aumayr

Vienna University of Technology

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W. Meissl

Vienna University of Technology

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