Electrons as probes of dynamics in molecules and clusters : a contribution from Time Dependent Density Functional Theory
P. Wopperer, P. M. Dinh, P.-G. Reinhard, and E. Suraud

TL;DR
This paper reviews how Time-Dependent Density Functional Theory (TDDFT) can be used to analyze electron emission in molecules and clusters following electromagnetic excitation, highlighting recent experimental and theoretical advances.
Contribution
It introduces a real-time, real-space TDDFT approach with Self-Interaction Correction for detailed analysis of electronic emission in molecules and clusters.
Findings
TDDFT accurately reproduces PES and PAD patterns.
Recent light sources enable new dynamical studies.
Theoretical results align well with experimental data.
Abstract
Various ways to analyze the dynamical response of clusters and molecules to electromagnetic perturbations exist. Particularly rich information can be obtained from measuring the properties of electrons emitted in the course of the excitation dynamics. Such an analysis of electron signals covers total ionization, Photo-Electron Spectra, Photoelectron Angular Distributions, and ideally combined PES/PAD, with a long history in molecular physics, also increasingly used in cluster physics. Recent progress in the design of new light sources (high intensity and/or frequency, ultra short pulses) opens new possibilities for measurements and thus has renewed the interest on the analysis of dynamical scenarios through these observables, well beyond a simple access to a density of states. This, in turn, has motivated many theoretical investigations of the dynamics of electronic emission for…
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