Dissociating diatomic molecules in ultrafast and intense light
Christian Buth

TL;DR
This paper develops an -based quantum dynamics theory for diatomic molecules under ultrafast, intense light, addressing ionization, dissociation, and electronic transitions with novel numerical and Monte Carlo methods.
Contribution
It introduces a new formalism combining master equations and quantum Monte Carlo methods for simulating molecular dissociation in intense light fields.
Findings
Efficient numerical solution for molecular quantum dynamics.
Novel treatment of quantum jumps depending on internuclear distance.
Applicable to molecules exposed to XUV and X-ray radiation.
Abstract
An theory is devised for the quantum dynamics of molecules undergoing (multiple) ionization in ultrafast and intense light. Specifically, the intertwined problem of photoionization, radiative, and electronic transitions in the course of dissociation is addressed which arises, e.g., when molecules are exposed to XUV light or x rays from free electron lasers or attosecond light sources, but the approach is equally useful in optical strong-field physics. The coherent interaction of the molecule with the light in a specific charge state is also treated. I set out from an abstract formulation in terms of the quantum optical notion of system-reservoir interaction using a master equation in Lindblad form and analyze its short-time approximation. First, I express it in a direct sum rigged Hilbert space for an efficient solution with numerical methods for systems of…
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