RESUMO
The torsional motion of a molecule composed of two substituted benzene rings, linked by a single bond, is coherently controlled by a pair of strong (3×10^{13} W cm^{-2}), nonresonant (800 nm) 200-fs-long laser pulses-both linearly polarized perpendicular to the single-bond axis. If the second pulse is sent at the time when the two benzene rings rotate toward (away from) each other the amplitude of the torsion is strongly enhanced (reduced). The torsional motion persists for more than 150 ps corresponding to approximately 120 torsional oscillations. Our calculations show that the key to control is the strong transient modification of the natural torsional potential by the laser-induced dynamic Stark effect.
RESUMO
Laser-aligned carbondisulfide (CS2) molecules are singly ionized by multiphoton absorption from intense, linearly polarized 25 fs laser pulses. The angular distribution of the photoelectrons exhibits a significant dependence on the angle between the polarizations of the aligning and ionizing laser fields. The widely used strong-field approximation predicts angular distributions in qualitative agreement with the experimental data but fails at a quantitative level.