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Dive into the research topics where Vladimir Petrovic is active.

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Featured researches published by Vladimir Petrovic.


Optics Express | 2010

Time-resolved pump-probe experiments at the LCLS

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

The first time-resolved x-ray/optical pump-probe experiments at the SLAC Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) used a combination of feedback methods and post-analysis binning techniques to synchronize an ultrafast optical laser to the linac-based x-ray laser. Transient molecular nitrogen alignment revival features were resolved in time-dependent x-ray-induced fragmentation spectra. These alignment features were used to find the temporal overlap of the pump and probe pulses. The strong-field dissociation of x-ray generated quasi-bound molecular dications was used to establish the residual timing jitter. This analysis shows that the relative arrival time of the Ti:Sapphire laser and the x-ray pulses had a distribution with a standard deviation of approximately 120 fs. The largest contribution to the jitter noise spectrum was the locking of the laser oscillator to the reference RF of the accelerator, which suggests that simple technical improvements could reduce the jitter to better than 50 fs.


Nature Communications | 2014

Ultrafast X-ray Auger probing of photoexcited molecular dynamics

Brian K. McFarland; J. P. Farrell; Shungo Miyabe; Francesco Tarantelli; A Aguilar; N. Berrah; Christoph Bostedt; John D. Bozek; P. H. Bucksbaum; J C Castagna; Ryan Coffee; James Cryan; L. Fang; Raimund Feifel; Kelly J. Gaffney; J. M. Glownia; Todd J. Martínez; Melanie Mucke; B. Murphy; Adi Natan; T. Osipov; Vladimir Petrovic; S. Schorb; Thomas Schultz; Limor S. Spector; M Swiggers; Ian Tenney; Shibing Wang; J. L. White; W. White

Molecules can efficiently and selectively convert light energy into other degrees of freedom. Disentangling the underlying ultrafast motion of electrons and nuclei of the photoexcited molecule presents a challenge to current spectroscopic approaches. Here we explore the photoexcited dynamics of molecules by an interaction with an ultrafast X-ray pulse creating a highly localized core hole that decays via Auger emission. We discover that the Auger spectrum as a function of photoexcitation--X-ray-probe delay contains valuable information about the nuclear and electronic degrees of freedom from an element-specific point of view. For the nucleobase thymine, the oxygen Auger spectrum shifts towards high kinetic energies, resulting from a particular C-O bond stretch in the ππ* photoexcited state. A subsequent shift of the Auger spectrum towards lower kinetic energies displays the electronic relaxation of the initial photoexcited state within 200 fs. Ab-initio simulations reinforce our interpretation and indicate an electronic decay to the nπ* state.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2012

Control of 1,3-cyclohexadiene photoisomerization using light-induced conical intersections.

Jaehee Kim; Hongli Tao; J. L. White; Vladimir Petrovic; Todd J. Martínez; P. H. Bucksbaum

We have studied the photoinduced isomerization from 1,3-cyclohexadiene to 1,3,5-hexatriene in the presence of an intense ultrafast laser pulse. We find that the laser field maximally suppresses isomerization if it is both polarized parallel to the excitation dipole and present 50 fs after the initial photoabsorption, at the time when the system is expected to be in the vicinity of a conical intersection that mediates this structural transition. A modified ab initio multiple spawning (AIMS) method shows that the laser induces a resonant coupling between the excited state and the ground state, i.e., a light-induced conical intersection. The theory accounts for the timing and direction of the effect.


Journal of Physics B | 2014

Probing ultrafast electronic and molecular dynamics with free-electron lasers.

L. Fang; T. Osipov; B. Murphy; Artem Rudenko; Daniel Rolles; Vladimir Petrovic; Christoph Bostedt; John D. Bozek; P. H. Bucksbaum; N. Berrah

Molecular dynamics is an active area of research, focusing on revealing fundamental information on molecular structures and photon–molecule interaction and with broad impacts in chemical and biological sciences. Experimental investigation of molecular dynamics has been advanced by the development of new light sources and techniques, deepening our understanding of natural processes and enabling possible control and modification of chemical and biomolecular processes. Free-electron lasers (FELs) deliver unprecedented intense and short photon pulses in the vacuum ultraviolet and x-ray spectral ranges, opening a new era for the study of electronic and nuclear dynamics in molecules. This review focuses on recent molecular dynamics investigations using FELs. We present recent work concerning dynamics of molecular interaction with FELs using an intrinsic clock within a single x-ray pulse as well as using an external clock in a pump–probe scheme. We review the latest developments on correlated and coincident spectroscopy in FEL-based research and recent results revealing photo-induced interaction dynamics using these techniques. We also describe new instrumentations to conduct x-ray pump–x-ray probe experiments with spectroscopy and imaging detectors.


Journal of Physics B | 2015

Strongly aligned gas-phase molecules at free-electron lasers.

Thomas Kierspel; Joss Wiese; Terry Mullins; Andy Aquila; Anton Barty; Richard Bean; Rebecca Boll; Sébastien Boutet; P. H. Bucksbaum; Henry N. Chapman; Lauge Christensen; Alan Fry; Mark S. Hunter; Jason E. Koglin; Mengning Liang; Valerio Mariani; Andrew J. Morgan; Adi Natan; Vladimir Petrovic; Daniel Rolles; Artem Rudenko; Kirsten Schnorr; Henrik Stapelfeldt; Stephan Stern; Jan Thøgersen; Chun Hong Yoon; Fenglin Wang; Sebastian Trippel; Jochen Küpper

Here, we demonstrate a novel experimental implementation to strongly align molecules at full repetition rates of free-electron lasers. We utilized the available in-house laser system at the coherent x-ray imaging beamline at the linac coherent light source. Chirped laser pulses, i.e., the direct output from the regenerative amplifier of the Ti:Sa chirped pulse amplification laser system, were used to strongly align 2, 5-diiodothiophene molecules in a molecular beam. The alignment laser pulses had pulse energies of a few mJ and a pulse duration of 94 ps. A degree of alignment of


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2012

Ultrafast ring opening in 1,3-cyclohexadiene investigated by simplex-based spectral unmixing.

J. L. White; Jaehee Kim; Vladimir Petrovic; P. H. Bucksbaum


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

\langle {\mathrm{cos}}^{2}{\theta }_{2{\rm{D}}}\rangle =0.85


Journal of Modern Optics | 2016

Femtosecond X-ray-induced fragmentation of fullerenes

N. Berrah; B. Murphy; Hui Xiong; Li Fang; T. Osipov; Edwin Kukk; Markus Guehr; Raimund Feifel; Vladimir Petrovic; Ken R. Ferguson; John D. Bozek; Christoph Bostedt; L. J. Frasinski; P. H. Bucksbaum; Jean-Charles Castagna


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2008

Polarization dependence of transition intensities in double resonance experiments: Unresolved spin doublets

Vladimir Petrovic; Robert W. Field

was measured, limited by the intrinsic temperature of the molecular beam rather than by the available laser system. With the general availability of synchronized chirped-pulse-amplified near-infrared laser systems at short-wavelength laser facilities, our approach allows for the universal preparation of molecules tightly fixed in space for experiments with x-ray pulses.


Journal of Physics B | 2015

Auger electron and photoabsorption spectra of glycine in the vicinity of the oxygen K-edge measured with an X-FEL

Alvaro Sanchez-Gonzalez; T. R. Barillot; R. J. Squibb; Přemysl Kolorenč; Marcus Agåker; Vitali Averbukh; Michael J. Bearpark; Christoph Bostedt; J. D. Bozek; S. Bruce; S. Carron Montero; Ryan Coffee; Bridgette Cooper; James Cryan; Minjie Dong; John H. D. Eland; Li Fang; H. Fukuzawa; Markus Guehr; M. Ilchen; A. S. Johnsson; C. Liekhus-S; Agostino Marinelli; Timothy Maxwell; K. Motomura; Melanie Mucke; Adi Natan; T. Osipov; Christofer Östlin; Markus Pernpointner

We use spectral unmixing to determine the number of transient photoproducts and to track their evolution following the photo-excitation of 1,3-cyclohexadiene (CHD) to form 1,3,5-hexatriene (HT) in the gas phase. The ring opening is initiated with a 266 nm ultraviolet laser pulse and probed via fragmentation with a delayed intense infrared 800 nm laser pulse. The ion time-of-flight (TOF) spectra are analyzed with a simplex-based spectral unmixing technique. We find that at least three independent spectra are needed to model the transient TOF spectra. Guided by mathematical and physical constraints, we decompose the transient TOF spectra into three spectra associated with the presence of CHD, CHD(+), and HT, and show how these three species appear at different times during the ring opening.

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Christoph Bostedt

Argonne National Laboratory

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N. Berrah

University of Connecticut

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James Cryan

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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John D. Bozek

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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T. Osipov

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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B. Murphy

Western Michigan University

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Ryan Coffee

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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