Competition between excitation and electronic decay of short-lived molecular states
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Abstract
The nuclear dynamics accompanying the excitation to and the subsequent decay of an electronic state is discussed. Particular attention is paid to cases, in which the whole process cannot be divided into two steps (excitation and decay) since the excitation and the decay times are of the same order of magnitude. The recently introduced time-dependent formulation of the theory describing the wave packets’ dynamics is extended to include the excitation process. The wave packets can be related to the intensity of the emitted particles. Most of the resulting integrals can actually be performed by employing eigenstates of the Hamiltonians corresponding to the involved potential energy surfaces. This leads to the so called “timeindependent” formulation of the theory. Computational details of the implementation of the corresponding “timedependent” and “time-independent” methods are presented. Illustrative applications are given to illuminate both the influence of the excitation process and the lifetime of the decaying state. It emerges that the intuitive interpretation of the spectra (within the above two step model) may fail. Insight into the process is gained by studying the evolution of the spectra as a function of time. The appearance of “atomic lines” due to dissociative decaying and final states is investigated in some detail.
PACS
33.80.-b 32.80.Hd 42.55.VcPreview
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