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@ARTICLE{Wallauer:1041609,
author = {Wallauer, Robert and Raths, Miriam and Stallberg, Klaus and
Münster, Lasse and Brandstetter, Dominik and Yang,
Xiaosheng and Güdde, Jens and Puschnig, Peter and Soubatch,
Serguei and Kumpf, Christian and Bocquet, Francois C. and
Tautz, Frank Stefan and Höfer, Ulrich},
title = {{T}racing orbital images on ultrafast time scales},
publisher = {arXiv},
reportid = {FZJ-2025-02343},
year = {2020},
abstract = {Frontier orbitals, i.e., the highest occupied and lowest
unoccupied orbitals of a molecule, generally determine
molecular properties, such as chemical bonding and
reactivities. Consequently, there has been a lot of interest
in measuring them, despite the fact that, strictly speaking,
they are not quantum-mechanical observables. Yet, with
photoemission tomography a powerful technique has recently
been introduced by which the electron distribution in
orbitals of molecules adsorbed at surfaces can be imaged in
momentum space. This has even been used for the
identification of reaction intermediates in surface
reactions. However, so far it has been impossible to follow
an orbital's momentum-space dynamics in time, for example
through an excitation process or a chemical reaction. Here,
we report a key step in this direction: we combine
time-resolved photoemission employing high laser harmonics
and a recently developed momentum microscope to establish a
tomographic, femtosecond pump-probe experiment of unoccupied
molecular orbitals. Specifically, we measure the full
momentum-space distribution of transiently excited
electrons. Because in molecules this momentum-space
distribution is closely linked to orbital shapes, our
experiment offers the extraordinary possibility to observe
ultrafast electron motion in time and space. This enables us
to connect their excited states dynamics to specific
real-space excitation pathways.},
keywords = {Chemical Physics (physics.chem-ph) (Other) / Mesoscale and
Nanoscale Physics (cond-mat.mes-hall) (Other) / Other
Condensed Matter (cond-mat.other) (Other) / FOS: Physical
sciences (Other)},
cin = {PGI-3},
cid = {I:(DE-Juel1)PGI-3-20110106},
pnm = {5213 - Quantum Nanoscience (POF4-521)},
pid = {G:(DE-HGF)POF4-5213},
typ = {PUB:(DE-HGF)25},
doi = {10.48550/ARXIV.2010.02599},
url = {https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/1041609},
}