New Journal of Physics (Jan 2022)
Roles of the transition amplitude phases in photoelectron asymmetry of single strong attosecond pulse
Abstract
The angular distributions of the photoelectrons in ionization of hydrogen atom by both circularly and linearly polarized intense extreme ultraviolet (XUV) attosecond pulse are investigated by numerically solving the time-dependent Schrödinger equation. We clearly identify nonperturbative features in studying the asymmetrical photoelectron angular distributions in the polarization plane for the XUV photon energy (16.3 eV) close to the ionization threshold, while such nonperturbative features are absent for higher photon energy (36 eV) in the same pulse intensity region. In addition to the carrier-envelope phase (CEP) dependence, the ejection asymmetry of the photoelectron is also sensitive to the relative phases of transition amplitudes in absorbing one photon and two photons. As a consequence, the CEPs corresponding to the maximal (or zero) asymmetry obviously vary as the pulse intensity increases in a moderately large region from 1 × 10 ^15 W cm ^−2 to 30 × 10 ^15 W cm ^−2 . We attribute the intensity dependence of the transition amplitude phases to a consequence of the depletion of population as well as the Stark energy shift of the initial state. We show that the relative phases of transition amplitudes can be precisely decoded from the pulse intensity dependence of the ejection asymmetry and those phases are insensitive to the ellipticity of the laser pulse.
Keywords