Probing autoionization decay lifetimes of the 4d-16 core-excited states in xenon using attosecond noncollinear four-wave-mixing spectroscopy
Abstract
The decay of core-excited states is a sensitive probe of autoionization dynamics and correlation effects in many-electron systems, occurring on the fastest timescales. Xenon, with its dense manifold of autoionizing resonances that can be coupled with near-infrared light, provides a platform to investigate these processes. In this work, the autoionization decay lifetimes of 4d-16 ( = s, p, d, ...) core-excited states in xenon atoms are probed with extreme ultraviolet (XUV) attosecond noncollinear four-wave-mixing (FWM) spectroscopy. The 4d-1\5/2,\, 3/2\6p XUV-bright states (optically dipole allowed) exhibit decay lifetimes of 6 fs, which is consistent with spectator-type decay. In contrast, the 4d-1\5/2,\, 3/2\6s and 4d-1\5/2,\, 3/2\6d XUV-dark states (optically dipole forbidden) show longer decay lifetimes of 20 fs. Photoionization calculations confirm that all core-hole states with 4d character should decay via spectator channels in ≤ 6 fs, suggesting that the apparent longer dark state decay times arise from an alternative mechanism. A few-level simulation of the FWM process shows that the inclusion of a nearby, longer-lived dark state can mimic the experimental FWM signal, suggesting population cycling with a second electronic state with non-4d character. Ab-initio calculations support the presence of such multi-electron excited states in the 60-70 eV range. These results demonstrate that FWM signals can encode coupled-state dynamics when probing complex systems, highlighting the importance of combining theoretical and experimental approaches to disentangle accurate core-level decay pathways and lifetimes.
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