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O: Fachverband Oberflächenphysik

O 60: Time-Resolved Spectroscopies

O 60.8: Talk

Thursday, March 29, 2007, 17:30–17:45, H42

The Laser-Assisted Photoelectric Effect on Surfaces — •Aeschlimann Martin1, Luis Miaja-Avila2, Guido Saathoff2, Margaret M. Murnane2, and Henry C. Kapteyn21Department of Physics, University of Kaiserslautern, Kaiserslautern, Germany D-67663 — 2Department of Physics and JILA, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309-0440

While the laser-assisted photoelectric effect (LAPE) in atoms is well established for the characterization of femtosecond EUV pulses, the equivalent process in the original manifestation of the photoelectric effect -photoemission from surfaces- has not therefore been studied.

In the present work, we present the first observation of the LAPE process in two-color surface photoemission [1]. In our experiment, IR pulses of 30 fs duration and 1.5 mJ at 780 nm are produced by a Ti:sapphire laser system and split into probe and pump. The probe beam is upconverted to the EUV using phase-matched high harmonic generation in a hollow fiber. A pair of Si:Mo multilayer mirrors spectrally selects the 27th harmonic (30 nm). The pump beam is directed through an optical delay arm and spatially and temporally overlapped with the EUV beam on a Pt(111) sample. A time-of-flight detector then measures the kinetic energy of the photoemitted electrons. In the presence of the pump pulse, these electrons can either absorb or emit an IR photon leading to sidebands in the EUV photoelectron spectrum. This `dressing` of the continuum states is visible as steps in the Fermi edge.

[1] L. Miaja-Avila et al, Phys. Rev. Lett. 97, 113604 (2006)

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