Goldilocks Zone for Enhanced Ionization in Strong Laser Fields
Abstract
Utilizing a benchmark measurement of laser-induced ionization of an H2+ molecular ion beam target at infrared wavelength around 2 μm, we show that the characteristic two-peak structure predicted for laser-induced enhanced ionization of H2+ and diatomic molecules in general, is a phenomenon which is confined to a small laser parameter space --- a Goldilocks Zone. Further, we control the effect experimentally and measure its imprint on the electron momentum. We replicate the behavior with simulations, which reproduce the measured kinetic-energy release as well as the correlated-electron spectra. Based on this, a model, which both maps out the Goldilocks Zone and illustrates why enhanced ionization has proven so elusive in H2+, is derived.
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