Transient ionization potential depression in nonthermal dense plasmas at high x-ray intensity
Rui Jin (1, 2), Malik Muhammad Abdullah (3), Zoltan Jurek (1 and, 4), Robin Santra (1, 4, 5), Sang-Kil Son (1, 4) ((1) Center for, Free-Electron Laser Science, DESY, Notkestrasse 85, 22607 Hamburg, Germany,, (2) Department of Physics, Astronomy, Shanghai Jiao Tong University,

TL;DR
This paper introduces a non-LTE approach combining quantum and classical methods to study transient ionization potential depression in dense plasmas created by XFELs, capturing nonthermal effects during ultrafast interactions.
Contribution
It develops a novel non-LTE hybrid model to analyze time-dependent IPD in dense plasmas, surpassing LTE limitations and aligning well with experimental data.
Findings
Transient IPD distributions evolve with time
Good agreement with experimental IPD measurements
Model captures nonthermal plasma dynamics
Abstract
The advent of x-ray free-electron lasers (XFELs), which provide intense ultrashort x-ray pulses, has brought a new way of creating and analyzing hot and warm dense plasmas in the laboratory. Because of the ultrashort pulse duration, the XFEL-produced plasma will be out of equilibrium at the beginning and even the electronic subsystem may not reach thermal equilibrium while interacting with a femtosecond time-scale pulse. In the dense plasma, the ionization potential depression (IPD) induced by the plasma environment plays a crucial role for understanding and modeling microscopic dynamical processes. However, all theoretical approaches for IPD have been based on local thermal equilibrium (LTE) and it has been controversial to use LTE IPD models for the nonthermal situation. In this work, we propose a non-LTE (NLTE) approach to calculate the IPD effect by combining a quantum-mechanical…
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