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Dive into the research topics where Mathieu Gisselbrecht is active.

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Featured researches published by Mathieu Gisselbrecht.


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Probing Single-Photon Ionization on the Attosecond Time Scale

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.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2005

The electronic structure of free water clusters probed by Auger electron spectroscopy

Gunnar Öhrwall; Reinhold F. Fink; Maxim Tchaplyguine; Lars Ojamäe; Marcus Lundwall; R. R. T. Marinho; A. Naves de Brito; S. L. Sorensen; Mathieu Gisselbrecht; R. Feifel; Torbjörn Rander; Andreas Lindblad; Joachim Schulz; Leif J. Sæthre; Nils Mårtensson; S. Svensson; Olle Björneholm

(H2O)(N) clusters generated in a supersonic expansion source with N approximately 1000 were core ionized by synchrotron radiation, giving rise to core-level photoelectron and Auger electron spectra (AES), free from charging effects. The AES is interpreted as being intermediate between the molecular and solid water spectra showing broadened bands as well as a significant shoulder at high kinetic energy. Qualitative considerations as well as ab initio calculations explain this shoulder to be due to delocalized final states in which the two valence holes are mostly located at different water molecules. The ab initio calculations show that valence hole configurations with both valence holes at the core-ionized water molecule are admixed to these final states and give rise to their intensity in the AES. Density-functional investigations of model systems for the doubly ionized final states--the water dimer and a 20-molecule water cluster--were performed to analyze the localization of the two valence holes in the electronic ground states. Whereas these holes are preferentially located at the same water molecule in the dimer, they are delocalized in the cluster showing a preference of the holes for surface molecules. The calculated double-ionization potential of the cluster (22.1 eV) is in reasonable agreement with the low-energy limit of the delocalized hole shoulder in the AES.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Phase Measurement of Resonant Two-Photon Ionization in Helium

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 Physics B | 2003

Observation of elastic scattering effects on photoelectron angular distributions in free Xe clusters

Gunnar Öhrwall; Maxim Tchaplyguine; Mathieu Gisselbrecht; Marcus Lundwall; R. Feifel; Torbjörn Rander; Joachim Schulz; Rrt Marinho; Andreas Lindgren; S. L. Sorensen; S. Svensson; Olle Björneholm

We report an observation of substantial deviations in the photoelectron angular distribution for photoionization of atoms in free Xe clusters compared to the case of photoionization of free atoms. The cross section, however, seems not to vary between the cluster and free atoms. This observation was made in the vicinity of the Xe 4d Cooper minimum, where the atomic angular distribution is known to vary dramatically. The angular distribution of electrons emitted from atoms in the clusters is more isotropic than that of free atoms over the entire kinetic energy range studied. Furthermore, the angular distribution is more isotropic for atoms in the interior of the clusters than for atoms at the surface. We attribute this deviation to elastic scattering of the outgoing photoelectrons. We have investigated two average cluster sizes, (N) approximate to 4000 and 1000 and found no significant differences between these two cases. (Less)


Nature Communications | 2016

Spectral phase measurement of a Fano resonance using tunable attosecond pulses.

Marija Kotur; Diego Guenot; Álvaro Jiménez-Galán; David Kroon; Esben Witting Larsen; Maite Louisy; Samuel Bengtsson; Miguel Miranda; Johan Mauritsson; Cord L. Arnold; Sophie E. Canton; Mathieu Gisselbrecht; Thomas Carette; Jan Marcus Dahlström; Eva Lindroth; Alfred Maquet; Luca Argenti; Fernando Martín; Anne L'Huillier

Electron dynamics induced by resonant absorption of light is of fundamental importance in nature and has been the subject of countless studies in many scientific areas. Above the ionization threshold of atomic or molecular systems, the presence of discrete states leads to autoionization, which is an interference between two quantum paths: direct ionization and excitation of the discrete state coupled to the continuum. Traditionally studied with synchrotron radiation, the probability for autoionization exhibits a universal Fano intensity profile as a function of excitation energy. However, without additional phase information, the full temporal dynamics cannot be recovered. Here we use tunable attosecond pulses combined with weak infrared radiation in an interferometric setup to measure not only the intensity but also the phase variation of the photoionization amplitude across an autoionization resonance in argon. The phase variation can be used as a fingerprint of the interactions between the discrete state and the ionization continua, indicating a new route towards monitoring electron correlations in time.


Journal of Physics B | 2014

Measurements of relative photoemission time delays in noble gas atoms

Diego Guenot; David Kroon; Emeric Balogh; Esben Witting Larsen; Marija Kotur; Miguel Miranda; Thomas Fordell; Per Johnsson; Johan Mauritsson; Mathieu Gisselbrecht; Katalin Varjú; Cord L. Arnold; Thomas Carette; Anatoli Kheifets; Eva Lindroth; Anne L'Huillier; Jan Marcus Dahlström

We determine relative photoemission time delays between valence electrons in different noble gas atoms (Ar, Ne and He) in an energy range between 31 and 37 eV. The atoms are ionized by an attosecond pulse train synchronized with an infrared laser field and the delays are measured using an interferometric technique. We compare our results with calculations using the random phase approximation with exchange and multi-configurational Hartree-Fock. We also investigate the influence of the different ionization angular channels.


Science | 2017

Photoionization in the time and frequency domain

Marcus Isinger; R. J. Squibb; D. Busto; S. Zhong; Anne Harth; David Kroon; Saikat Nandi; Cord L. Arnold; Miguel Miranda; Jan Marcus Dahlström; Eva Lindroth; Raimund Feifel; Mathieu Gisselbrecht; Anne L’Huillier

Resetting the clock on photoemission The ability to produce attosecond pulses of light provides access to some of the fastest electronic processes occurring within atoms. Tracking the temporal dynamics of the photoemission process in which an atom absorbs a high-energy photon and the electron escapes has exposed a discrepancy between the initial experimental findings and subsequent theoretical modeling. Isinger et al. present an ultrafast process that can account for and distinguish the different contributions to the photoemission processes in neon atoms. The findings reveal an “electron shake-up” process that may explain the discrepancy, bringing closure to a 7-year discussion. Science, this issue p. 893 An ultrafast technique is developed that can disentangle the different processes in photoionization. Ultrafast processes in matter, such as the electron emission after light absorption, can now be studied using ultrashort light pulses of attosecond duration (10−18 seconds) in the extreme ultraviolet spectral range. The lack of spectral resolution due to the use of short light pulses has raised issues in the interpretation of the experimental results and the comparison with theoretical calculations. We determine photoionization time delays in neon atoms over a 40–electron volt energy range with an interferometric technique combining high temporal and spectral resolution. We spectrally disentangle direct ionization from ionization with shake-up, in which a second electron is left in an excited state, and obtain excellent agreement with theoretical calculations, thereby solving a puzzle raised by 7-year-old measurements.


Chemical Physics Letters | 2002

The dynamic Auger-Doppler effect in HF and DF: control of fragment velocities in femtosecond dissociation through photon energy detuning

Karoline Wiesner; A. Naves de Brito; S. L. Sorensen; Florian Burmeister; Mathieu Gisselbrecht; S. Svensson; Olle Björneholm

Abstract The Auger–Doppler effect in the experimental spectra of HF and DF is presented, and the dynamics of ultra-fast dissociation in the core-excited state are discussed. The Doppler splitting of the atomic Auger peak is calculated and simulated using a classical model and a very good agreement is found between experiment and simulation. It is shown that the difference in photon energy relative to the resonance is transferred completely into the kinetic energy release (KER). This is expected to be a general phenomenon, but is clearly illuminated in the HF/DF case. Thus the fragment velocity can be controlled through photon energy detuning.


Journal of Physics B | 2008

Evolution of angular distributions in two-colour, few-photon ionization of helium

O. Guyétand; Mathieu Gisselbrecht; A Huetz; Pierre Agostini; Richard Taïeb; Alfred Maquet; B. Carré; P. Breger; O. Gobert; D. Garzella; J.-F. Hergott; O. Tcherbakoff; H. Merdji; M. Bougeard; H. Rottke; M. Böttcher; Z. Ansari; Ph. Antoine

Single ionization of helium by a superposition of selected XUV high harmonics and infrared radiation has been studied by a momentum imaging technique. The measured angular distributions of photoelectrons are compared to numerical time-dependent calculations, showing very good agreement after average. The calculated angular distributions appear to depend critically on the delay between harmonic and infrared pulses on the attosecond scale, and on the relative phases and intensities of the harmonics.


New Journal of Physics | 2011

Metrology of high-order harmonics for free-electron laser seeding

Christian Erny; Erik Mansten; Mathieu Gisselbrecht; Jörg Schwenke; Rafal Rakowski; Xinkui He; Mette B. Gaarde; Sverker Werin; Anne L'Huillier

We examine the characteristics of high-order harmonics generated with 800 nm, 25 mJ, 160 fs laser pulses in an Ar gas cell with the objective of seeding a free electron laser. We measure the energy per pulse and per harmonic, the energy jitter, the divergence and the position stability of the harmonic beam. We perform ab initio numerical simulations based on integration of the time-dependent Schrodinger equation and of the wave equation within the slowly varying envelope approximation. The results reproduce the experimental measurements to better than a factor of two. The interaction of a frequency comb of harmonic fields with an electron bunch in an undulator is examined with a simple model consisting of calculating the energy modulation owing to the seed-electron interaction. The model indicates that the undulator acts as a spectral filter selecting a given harmonic. (Less)

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