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Dive into the research topics where M. Schöffler is active.

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Featured researches published by M. Schöffler.


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.


Science | 2013

Direct Determination of Absolute Molecular Stereochemistry in Gas Phase by Coulomb Explosion Imaging

M. Pitzer; Maksim Kunitski; Allan S. Johnson; T. Jahnke; H. Sann; F. Sturm; L. Schmidt; H. Schmidt-Böcking; R. Dörner; Jürgen Stohner; Julia Kiedrowski; Michael Reggelin; Sebastian Marquardt; Alexander Schießer; Robert Berger; M. Schöffler

Absolute Images Molecules are held together by a balance of charge between negative electrons and positive nuclei. When multiple electrons are expelled by laser irradiation, the remaining, mutually repulsive nuclei fly apart in a Coulomb explosion. Instead of traditional x-ray diffraction methods that require crystalline samples, Pitzer et al. (p. 1096) show that by tracking the fragment trajectories from laser-induced Coulomb explosions of relatively simple gas phase molecules, they can determine the absolute stereochemical configuration of enantiomers (mirror-image isomers). A simple molecule’s three-dimensional structure can be ascertained from the fragment trajectories when it is blown apart. Bijvoet’s method, which makes use of anomalous x-ray diffraction or dispersion, is the standard means of directly determining the absolute (stereochemical) configuration of molecules, but it requires crystalline samples and often proves challenging in structures exclusively comprising light atoms. Herein, we demonstrate a mass spectrometry approach that directly images the absolute configuration of individual molecules in the gas phase by cold target recoil ion momentum spectroscopy after laser ionization–induced Coulomb explosion. This technique is applied to the prototypical chiral molecule bromochlorofluoromethane and the isotopically chiral methane derivative bromodichloromethane.


Science | 2008

Ultrafast Probing of Core Hole Localization in N2

M. Schöffler; J. Titze; N. Petridis; T. Jahnke; K. Cole; L. Ph. H. Schmidt; A. Czasch; D. Akoury; O. Jagutzki; Joshua Williams; N. A. Cherepkov; S. K. Semenov; C W McCurdy; Thomas N. Rescigno; C. L. Cocke; T. Osipov; Seok-Yong Lee; M. H. Prior; A. Belkacem; Allen Lee Landers; H. Schmidt-Böcking; Th. Weber; R. Dörner

Although valence electrons are clearly delocalized in molecular bonding frameworks, chemists and physicists have long debated the question of whether the core vacancy created in a homonuclear diatomic molecule by absorption of a single x-ray photon is localized on one atom or delocalized over both. We have been able to clarify this question with an experiment that uses Auger electron angular emission patterns from molecular nitrogen after inner-shell ionization as an ultrafast probe of hole localization. The experiment, along with the accompanying theory, shows that observation of symmetry breaking (localization) or preservation (delocalization) depends on how the quantum entangled Bell state created by Auger decay is detected by the measurement.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Attosecond-recollision-controlled selective fragmentation of polyatomic molecules.

Xinhua Xie; Katharina Doblhoff-Dier; Stefan Roither; M. Schöffler; Daniil Kartashov; Huailiang Xu; Tim Rathje; G. G. Paulus; Andrius Baltuska; Stefanie Gräfe; Markus Kitzler

Control over various fragmentation reactions of a series of polyatomic molecules (acetylene, ethylene, 1,3-butadiene) by the optical waveform of intense few-cycle laser pulses is demonstrated experimentally. We show both experimentally and theoretically that the responsible mechanism is inelastic ionization from inner-valence molecular orbitals by recolliding electron wave packets, whose recollision energy in few-cycle ionizing laser pulses strongly depends on the optical waveform. Our work demonstrates an efficient and selective way of predetermining fragmentation and isomerization reactions in polyatomic molecules on subfemtosecond time scales.


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 | 2010

Fragmentation dynamics of CO(2)(3+) investigated by multiple electron capture in collisions with slow highly charged ions.

N. Neumann; D. Hant; L. Ph. H. Schmidt; J. Titze; T. Jahnke; A. Czasch; M. Schöffler; K. Kreidi; O. Jagutzki; H. Schmidt-Böcking; R. Dörner

Fragmentation of highly charged molecular ions or clusters consisting of more than two atoms can proceed in a one step synchronous manner where all bonds break simultaneously or sequentially by emitting one ion after the other. We separated these decay channels for the fragmentation of CO(2)(3+) ions by measuring the momenta of the ionic fragments. We show that the total energy deposited in the molecular ion is a control parameter which switches between three distinct fragmentation pathways: the sequential fragmentation in which the emission of an O(+) ion leaves a rotating CO(2+) ion behind that fragments after a time delay, the Coulomb explosion and an in-between fragmentation--the asynchronous dissociation. These mechanisms are directly distinguishable in Dalitz plots and Newton diagrams of the fragment momenta. The CO(2)(3+) ions are produced by multiple electron capture in collisions with 3.2 keV/u Ar(8+) ions.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Interatomic Coulombic Decay following Photoionization of the Helium Dimer: Observation of Vibrational Structure

T. Havermeier; T. Jahnke; K. Kreidi; R. Wallauer; S. Voss; M. Schöffler; S. Schössler; L. Foucar; N. Neumann; J. Titze; H. Sann; Matthias Kühnel; J. Voigtsberger; J. H. Morilla; Wieland Schöllkopf; H. Schmidt-Böcking; R. E. Grisenti; R. Dörner

Using synchrotron radiation we simultaneously ionize and excite one helium atom of a helium dimer (He2) in a shakeup process. The populated states of the dimer ion [i.e., He(*+)(n = 2, 3) - He] are found to deexcite via interatomic Coulombic decay. This leads to the emission of a second electron from the neutral site and a subsequent Coulomb explosion. In this Letter we present a measurement of the momenta of fragments that are created during this reaction. The electron energy distribution and the kinetic energy release of the two He+ ions show pronounced oscillations which we attribute to the structure of the vibrational wave function of the dimer ion.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Vibrationally resolved decay width of interatomic Coulombic decay in HeNe.

F. Trinter; Joshua Williams; M. Weller; M. Waitz; M. Pitzer; J. Voigtsberger; C. Schober; Gregor Kastirke; C. Müller; C. Goihl; Phillip Burzynski; Florian Wiegandt; R. Wallauer; Anton Kalinin; L. Schmidt; M. Schöffler; Ying-Chih Chiang; Kirill Gokhberg; T. Jahnke; R. Dörner

We investigate the ionization of HeNe from below the He 1s3p excitation to the He ionization threshold. We observe HeNe+ ions with an enhancement by more than a factor of 60 when the He side couples resonantly to the radiation field. These ions are an experimental proof of a two-center resonant photoionization mechanism predicted by Najjari et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 105, 153002 (2010)]. Furthermore, our data provide electronic and vibrational state resolved decay widths of interatomic Coulombic decay in HeNe dimers. We find that the interatomic Coulombic decay lifetime strongly increases with increasing vibrational state.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Evolution of interatomic Coulombic decay in the time domain.

F. Trinter; Joshua Williams; M. Weller; M. Waitz; M. Pitzer; J. Voigtsberger; C. Schober; Gregor Kastirke; C. Müller; C. Goihl; Phillip Burzynski; Florian Wiegandt; Tobias Bauer; R. Wallauer; H. Sann; Anton Kalinin; L. Ph. H. Schmidt; M. Schöffler; Nicolas Sisourat; T. Jahnke

During the past 15 years a novel decay mechanism of excited atoms has been discovered and investigated. This so-called interatomic Coulombic decay (ICD) involves the chemical environment of the electronically excited atom: the excitation energy is transferred (in many cases over long distances) to a neighbor of the initially excited particle usually ionizing that neighbor. It turned out that ICD is a very common decay route in nature as it occurs across van der Waals and hydrogen bonds. The time evolution of ICD is predicted to be highly complex, as its efficiency strongly depends on the distance of the atoms involved and this distance typically changes during the decay. Here we present the first direct measurement of the temporal evolution of ICD using a novel experimental approach.


Optics Express | 2013

Optimization of single-cycle terahertz generation in LiNbO 3 for sub-50 femtosecond pump pulses

Maksim Kunitski; Martin Richter; Mark D. Thomson; Arno Vredenborg; Jian Wu; T. Jahnke; M. Schöffler; H. Schmidt-Böcking; Hartmut G. Roskos; R. Dörner

We compare different tilted-pulse-front pumping schemes for single-cycle THz generation in LiNbO(3) crystals both theoretically and experimentally in terms of conversion efficiency. The conventional setup with a single lens as an imaging element has been found to be highly inefficient in the case of sub-50 fs pump pulses, mainly due to the resulting chromatic aberrations. These aberrations are avoided in the proposed new setup, which employs two concave mirrors in a Keplerian telescope arrangement as the imaging sequence. This partially compensates spherical aberrations and results in a ca. six times higher conversion efficiency in the case of 35-fs optical pump pulse duration compared to the single-lens setup. A THz field strength of 60 kV/cm was obtained using 0.5 mJ pump pulses. The divergence of the THz beam has been found experimentally to depend on the pump imaging scheme employed.

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R. Dörner

Goethe University Frankfurt

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T. Jahnke

Goethe University Frankfurt

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L. Ph. H. Schmidt

Goethe University Frankfurt

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O. Jagutzki

Goethe University Frankfurt

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J. Titze

Goethe University Frankfurt

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A. Czasch

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Th. Weber

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Markus Kitzler

Vienna University of Technology

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Xinhua Xie

Vienna University of Technology

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