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We demonstrate a two-dimensional time-domain spectroscopy method to extract amplitude and phase modifications of excited atomic states caused by the interaction with ultrashort laser pulses. The technique is based on Fourier analysis of the absorptio n spectrum of perturbed polarization decay. An analytical description of the method reveals how amplitude and phase information can be directly obtained from measurements. We apply the method experimentally to the helium atom, which is excited by attosecond-pulsed extreme ultraviolet light, to characterize laser-induced couplings of doubly-excited states.
Symmetric Lorentzian and asymmetric Fano line shapes are fundamental spectroscopic signatures that quantify the structural and dynamical properties of nuclei, atoms, molecules, and solids. This study introduces a universal temporal-phase formalism, m apping the Fano asymmetry parameter q to a phase {phi} of the time-dependent dipole-response function. The formalism is confirmed experimentally by laser-transforming Fano absorption lines of autoionizing helium into Lorentzian lines after attosecond-pulsed excitation. We also prove the inverse, the transformation of a naturally Lorentzian line into a Fano profile. A further application of this formalism amplifies resonantly interacting extreme-ultraviolet light by quantum-phase control. The quantum phase of excited states and its response to interactions can thus be extracted from line-shape analysis, with scientific applications in many branches of spectroscopy.
The concerted motion of two or more bound electrons governs atomic and molecular non-equilibrium processes and chemical reactions. It is thus a long-standing scientific dream to measure the dynamics of two bound correlated electrons in the quantum re gime. Quantum wave packets were previously observed for single-active electrons on their natural attosecond timescales. However, at least two active electrons and a nucleus are required to address the quantum three-body problem. This situation is realized in the helium atom, but direct time-resolved observation of two-electron wave-packet motion remained an unaccomplished challenge. Here, we measure a 1.2-femtosecond quantum beating among low-lying doubly-excited states in helium to evidence a correlated two-electron wave packet. Our experimental method combines attosecond transient-absorption spectroscopy at unprecedented high spectral resolution (20 meV near 60 eV) with an intensity-tuneable visible laser field to couple the quantum states from the perturbative to the strong-coupling regime. This multi-dimensional transient-coupling scheme reveals an inversion of the characteristic Fano line shapes for a range of doubly-excited states. Employing Fano-type autoionization as a natural quantum interferometer, a dynamical phase shift by laser coupling to the N=2 continuum is postulated and experimentally quantified. This phase maps a transition from effectively single-active-electron to two-electron dynamics as the electron-electron interaction increases in lower-lying quantum states. In the future, such experiments will provide benchmark data for testing dynamical few-body quantum theory. They will boost our understanding of chemically and biologically important metastable electronic transition states and their dynamics on attosecond time scales.
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