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Dive into the research topics where Oleg Kornilov is active.

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Featured researches published by Oleg Kornilov.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Double Core-Hole Production in N2: Beating the Auger Clock

Li Fang; M. Hoener; Oliver Gessner; Francesco Tarantelli; Stephen T. Pratt; Oleg Kornilov; Christian Buth; Markus Gühr; E. P. Kanter; Christoph Bostedt; John D. Bozek; Phil Bucksbaum; Mau Hsiung Chen; Ryan Coffee; James Cryan; M. Glownia; Edwin Kukk; Stephen R. Leone; N. Berrah

We investigate the creation of double K-shell holes in N2 molecules via sequential absorption of two photons on a time scale shorter than the core-hole lifetime by using intense x-ray pulses from the Linac Coherent Light Source free electron laser. The production and decay of these states is characterized by photoelectron spectroscopy and Auger electron spectroscopy. In molecules, two types of double core holes are expected, the first with two core holes on the same N atom, and the second with one core hole on each N atom. We report the first direct observations of the former type of core hole in a molecule, in good agreement with theory, and provide an experimental upper bound for the relative contribution of the latter type.


Physical Review Letters | 2005

Matter wave diffraction from an inclined transmission grating: searching for the elusive 4He trimer Efimov state.

R. Brühl; A. Kalinin; Oleg Kornilov; J. P. Toennies; Gerhard C. Hegerfeldt; M. Stoll

The size of the helium trimer is determined by diffracting a beam of 4He clusters from a 100 nm period grating inclined by 21 degrees. Because of the bar thickness the projected slit width is roughly halved to 27 nm, increasing the sensitivity to the trimer size. The peak intensities measured out to the eighth order are evaluated via a few-body scattering theory. The trimer pair distance is found to be (r) = 1.1(+0.4)(-0.5) nm in agreement with predictions for the ground state. No evidence for a significant amount of Efimov trimers is found. Their concentration is estimated to be under 6%, less than expected.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2011

Femtosecond Photoelectron Imaging of Transient Electronic States and Rydberg Atom Emission from Electronically Excited He Droplets

Oleg Kornilov; Oliver Bünermann; Daniel J. Haxton; Stephen R. Leone; Daniel M. Neumark; Oliver Gessner

Ultrafast relaxation of electronically excited pure He droplets is investigated by femtosecond time-resolved photoelectron imaging. Droplets are excited by extreme ultraviolet (EUV) pulses with photon energies below 24 eV. Excited states and relaxation products are probed by ionization with an infrared (IR) pulse with 1.6 eV photon energy. An initially excited droplet state decays on a time scale of 220 fs, leading predominantly to the emission of unaligned 1s3d Rydberg atoms. In a second relaxation channel, electronically aligned 1s4p Rydberg atoms are emitted from the droplet within less than 120 fs. The experimental results are described within a model that approximates electronically excited droplet states by localized, atomic Rydberg states perturbed by the local droplet environment in which the atom is embedded. The model suggests that, below 24 eV, EUV excitation preferentially leads to states that are localized in the surface region of the droplet. Electronically aligned 1s4p Rydberg atoms are expected to originate from excitations in the outermost surface regions, while nonaligned 1s3d Rydberg atoms emerge from a deeper surface region with higher local densities. The model is used to simulate the He droplet EUV absorption spectrum in good agreement with previously reported fluorescence excitation measurements.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2008

Photoelectron Imaging of Helium Droplets Doped with Xe and Kr Atoms

Chia C. Wang; Oleg Kornilov; Oliver Gessner; Jeong Hyun Kim; Darcy S. Peterka; Daniel M. Neumark

Helium droplets doped with Xe and Kr atoms were photoionized by using VUV synchrotron radiation from the Advanced Light Source and the resulting photoelectron images were measured. A wide range of He droplet sizes, photon energies, and dopant pick-up conditions was investigated. Significant ionization of dopants was observed at 21.6 eV, the absorption maximum of 2p (1)P1 electronic excited state of He droplets, indicating an indirect ionization mechanism via excitation transfer. The photoelectron images and spectra reveal multiple photoionization mechanisms and pathways for the photoelectrons to escape the droplet. Specifically, they show sets of sharp peaks assigned to two mechanisms for Penning ionization of the dopant by He* in which the photoelectrons leave the droplet with no detectable energy loss, a broad, intense feature representing electrons that undergo significant energy loss, and a small amount of ultraslow electrons that may result from electron trapping at the droplet surface. The droplet-size dependence of the broad, intense feature suggests the development of the conduction band edge in the largest droplets seen here ((N) approximately 250,000).


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2012

Ultrafast probing of ejection dynamics of Rydberg atoms and molecular fragments from electronically excited helium nanodroplets

Oliver Bünermann; Oleg Kornilov; Daniel J. Haxton; Stephen R. Leone; Daniel M. Neumark; Oliver Gessner

The ejection dynamics of Rydberg atoms and molecular fragments from electronically excited helium nanodroplets are studied with time-resolved extreme ultraviolet ion imaging spectroscopy. At excitation energies of 23.6 ± 0.2 eV, Rydberg atoms in n = 3 and n = 4 states are ejected on different time scales and with significantly different kinetic energy distributions. Specifically, n = 3 Rydberg atoms are ejected with kinetic energies as high as 0.85 eV, but their appearance is delayed by approximately 200 fs. In contrast, n = 4 Rydberg atoms appear within the time resolution of the experiment with considerably lower kinetic energies. Major features in the Rydberg atom kinetic energy distributions for both principal quantum numbers can be described within a simple elastic scattering model of localized perturbed atomic Rydberg atoms that are expelled from the droplet due to their repulsive interaction with the surrounding helium bath. Time-dependent kinetic energy distributions of He(2) (+) and He(3) (+) ions are presented that support the formation of molecular ions in an indirect droplet ionization process and the ejection of neutral Rydberg dimers on a similar time scale as the n = 3 Rydberg atoms.


Journal of Physics B | 2012

Molecular frame Auger electron energy spectrum from N2

James Cryan; J. M. Glownia; Jakob Andreasson; A. Belkacem; N. Berrah; Christoph Bostedt; John D. Bozek; N.A. Cherepkov; L. F. DiMauro; L. Fang; Oliver Gessner; Markus Gühr; Janos Hajdu; Marcus P. Hertlein; M. Hoener; Oleg Kornilov; J. P. Marangos; Anne Marie March; Brian K. McFarland; H. Merdji; Marc Messerschmidt; Vladimir Petrovic; C. Raman; D. Ray; David A. Reis; S K Semenov; M. Trigo; J. L. White; William E. White; L. Young

Here we present the first angle-resolved, non-resonant (normal) Auger spectra for impulsively aligned nitrogen molecules. We have measured the angular pattern of Auger electron emission following K-shell photoionization by 1.1 keV photons from the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS). Using strong-field-induced molecular alignment to make molecular frame measurements is equally effective for both repulsive and quasi-bound final states. The capability to resolve Auger emission angular distributions in the molecular frame of reference provides a new tool for spectral assignments in congested Auger electron spectra that takes advantage of the symmetries of the final diction states. Based on our experimental results and theoretical predictions, we propose the assignment of the spectral features in the Auger electron spectrum.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2010

Nanograting-based compact vacuum ultraviolet spectrometer and beam profiler for in situ characterization of high-order harmonic generation light sources.

Oleg Kornilov; Russell Wilcox; Oliver Gessner

A compact, versatile device for vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) beam characterization is presented. It combines the functionalities of a VUV spectrometer and a VUV beam profiler in one unit and is entirely supported by a standard DN200 CF flange. The spectrometer employs a silicon nitride transmission nanograting in combination with a microchannel plate-based imaging detector. This enables the simultaneous recording of wavelengths ranging from 10 to 80 nm with a resolution of 0.25-0.13 nm. Spatial beam profiles with diameters up to 10 mm are imaged with 0.1 mm resolution. The setup is equipped with an in-vacuum translation stage that allows for in situ switching between the spectrometer and beam profiler modes and for moving the setup out of the beam. The simple, robust design of the device is well suited for nonintrusive routine characterization of emerging laboratory- and accelerator-based VUV light sources. Operation of the device is demonstrated by characterizing the output of a femtosecond high-order harmonic generation light source.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2006

Application of scaling and kinetic equations to helium cluster size distributions: Homogeneous nucleation of a nearly ideal gas

Joseph Chaiken; Jerry Goodisman; Oleg Kornilov; J. Peter Toennies

A previously published model of homogeneous nucleation [Villarica et al., J. Chem. Phys. 98, 4610 (1993)] based on the Smoluchowski [Phys. Z. 17, 557 (1916)] equations is used to simulate the experimentally measured size distributions of 4He clusters produced in free jet expansions. The model includes only binary collisions and does not consider evaporative effects, so that binary reactive collisions are rate limiting for formation of all cluster sizes despite the need for stabilization of nascent clusters. The model represents these data very well, accounting in some cases for nearly four orders of magnitude in variation in abundance over cluster sizes ranging up to nearly 100 atoms. The success of the model may be due to particularities of 4He clusters, i.e., their very low coalescence exothermicity, and to the low temperature of 6.7 K at which the data were collected.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2004

Evidence for a bound HeH2 halo molecule by diffraction from a transmission grating

A. Kalinin; Oleg Kornilov; Lev Yu. Rusin; J. P. Toennies

The HeH2 van der Waals complex has been identified in a molecular beam produced by a cryogenic (T0=24.7 K) free jet expansion of a 1% H2 mixture in 99% 4He gas. The weakly bound HeH2 complexes in the beam are identified via their first order diffraction angles after passing through a 100 nm period transmission grating. An electron impact mass spectrometer analysis of the diffraction patterns is used to discriminate against ion fragments of the constituent gas clusters.


Journal of Physics B | 2016

Observation of autoionization dynamics and sub-cycle quantum beating in electronic molecular wave packets

Maurizio Reduzzi; Wei-Chun Chu; C. Feng; Antoine Dubrouil; J. Hummert; F. Calegari; Fabio Frassetto; L. Poletto; Oleg Kornilov; M. Nisoli; C. D. Lin; Giuseppe Sansone

The coherent interaction with ultrashort light pulses is a powerful strategy for monitoring and controlling the dynamics of wave packets in all states of matter. As light presents an oscillation period of a few femtoseconds (T = 2.6 fs in the near infrared spectral range), an external optical field can induce changes in a medium on the sub-cycle timescale, i.e. in a few hundred attoseconds. In this work, we resolve the dynamics of autoionizing states on the femtosecond timescale and observe the sub-cycle evolution of a coherent electronic wave packet in a diatomic molecule, exploiting a tunable ultrashort extreme ultraviolet pulse and a synchronized infrared field. The experimental observations are based on measuring the variations of the extreme ultraviolet radiation transmitted through the molecular gas. The different mechanisms contributing to the wave packet dynamics are investigated through theoretical simulations and a simple three level model. The method is general and can be extended to the investigation of more complex systems.

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Oliver Gessner

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Daniel M. Neumark

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Christoph Bostedt

Argonne National Laboratory

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John D. Bozek

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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M. Hoener

Western Michigan University

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N. Berrah

University of Connecticut

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James Cryan

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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