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Recoil-ion and electron momentum spectroscopy: reaction-microscopes
1.8K
Citations
265
References
2003
Year
EngineeringNuclear PhysicsMicroscopyBubble ChambersIon Beam InstrumentationElectron Cloud EffectsElectron OpticElectron Momentum SpectroscopyElectron SpectroscopyVector MomentaIon BeamIon EmissionPhysicsAtomic PhysicsParticle Beam PhysicsNuclear AstrophysicsExperimental Nuclear PhysicsNatural SciencesSpectroscopyApplied PhysicsElectron Microscope
Recoil-ion and electron momentum spectroscopy is a rapidly developing technique that allows one to measure the vector momenta of several ions and electrons resulting from atomic or molecular fragmentation. In a unique combination, large solid angles close to 4π and superior momentum resolutions around a few per cent of an atomic unit (a.u.) are typically reached in state-of-the art machines, so-called reaction-microscopes. Evolving from recoil-ion and cold target recoil-ion momentum spectroscopy (COLTRIMS), reaction-microscopes—the `bubble chambers of atomic physics'—mark the decisive step forward to investigate many-particle quantum-dynamics occurring when atomic and molecular systems or even surfaces and solids are exposed to time-dependent external electromagnetic fields.
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