Laser-Induced Dissociative Recombination of Carbon Dioxide

Abstract

We experimentally investigate laser-induced dissociative recombination of CO2 in linearly polarized strong laser fields with coincidence measurements. Our results show laser-induced dissociation processes originate from an electron recombination process after laser-induced double ionization. After double ionization of CO2, one electron is recaptured by the CO22+ and localized to O+ or CO+ in the following dissociation process. We found that the probability of electron localization to O+ is much higher than that to CO+. Further, our measurements reveal that the recombination probability of the first ionized electron is three times as high as that of the second ionized electron. Our work may trigger further experimental and theoretical studies on involved nuclear and electron dynamics in laser-induced dissociative recombination of molecules and their applications in controlling molecular dissociation with ultrashort laser pulses.

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