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Physical Sciences and Mathematics Commons

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Life Sciences

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Chemistry and Biochemistry Faculty Publications

2008

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Molecular-Orientation-Dependent Ac Stark Effect And Its Impact On Multiphoton Processes, Xi Chu Oct 2008

Molecular-Orientation-Dependent Ac Stark Effect And Its Impact On Multiphoton Processes, Xi Chu

Chemistry and Biochemistry Faculty Publications

We study the dependence of the ac Stark shifts of electronic energies on the molecular orientation relative to the polarization direction of an incident intense laser field, using a three-dimensional non-Hermitian Floquet method and H(2)+ as a model system. Simultaneously, we also study the orientation-dependent high-order harmonic generation (HHG) and multiphoton ionization (MPI). We find that with the presence of near-one-photon resonance, the Stark effect strongly mixes electronic states of different symmetries to create quasienergy states (QESs). The orientation dependence of multiphoton processes, in which these QESs play an important role, becomes complex. Population transfer is better achieved with aligned …


The Tropical Forest And Fire Emissions Experiment: Laboratory Fire Measurements And Synthesis Of Campaign Data, Robert J. Yokelson, Ted J. Christian, T. G. Karl, Alex Guenther Jan 2008

The Tropical Forest And Fire Emissions Experiment: Laboratory Fire Measurements And Synthesis Of Campaign Data, Robert J. Yokelson, Ted J. Christian, T. G. Karl, Alex Guenther

Chemistry and Biochemistry Faculty Publications

As part of the Tropical Forest and Fire Emissions Experiment (TROFFEE), tropical forest fuels were burned in a large. biomass-fire simulation facility and the smoke was characterized with open-path Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), proton-transfer reaction mass spectrometry (PTR-MS), gas chromatography (GC), GC/PTR-MS, and filter sampling of the particles. In most cases, about one-third of the fuel chlorine ended up in the particles and about one-half remained in the ash. About 50% of the mass of non-methane organic compounds (NMOC) emitted by these fires could be identified with the available instrumentation. The lab fire emission factors (EF, g compound emitted …