Above threshold ionization

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File:Hydrogen PES 95eV 1e15.png
The angle integrated photoelectron spectrum resulting from a laser interacting with a hydrogen atom. The x axis marks the electron kinetic energies E_k in eV, whilst the y axis is the differential probability. The first three Above threshold ionization peaks are visible from the image.

In atomic, molecular, and optical physics, above threshold ionization (ATI), is a multi-photon effect where an atom is ionized with more than the energetically required number of photons.[1] It was first observed in 1979.[2]

Photoelectrons

In the case of ATI the photoelectron peaks should appear at

 E_s = (n + s)\hbar \omega - W,

where the integer n represents the minimum number of photons absorbed and the integer s represents the number of additional photons absorbed. W is the ionization energy and E_s is the electron kinetic energy of the peak corresponding to s additional photons being absorbed.[3]

Structure

It typically has a strong maximum at the minimum number of photons to ionize the system, with successive peaks (known as ATI peaks) separated by the photon energy and thus corresponding to higher numbers of photons being absorbed.[1][4]

In the non-perturbative regime the bound states are dressed with the electric field, shifting the ionization energy. If the ponderomotive energy of the field is greater than the photon energy  \omega then the first peak disappears.[3]

Features from ultrashort pulses

High intensity ultrashort pulse lasers can create ATI features with 20 or more peaks.[5] The photoelectron spectrum of electron energies is continuous since actual light sources contain a spread of energies.

References

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External links

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  • Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The original paper on the discovery
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