Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Current progress in developing the nonlinear ionization theory of atoms and ions

193

Citations

139

References

2015

Year

TLDR

We review the status of Keldysh’s theory of ionization of atoms and ions by intense laser radiation. The authors examine the applicability of Keldysh’s theory, its relation to the Landau–Dykhne method, and extend it to ultrashort nonmonochromatic pulses, semiclassical imaginary‑time electron dynamics, tunneling interference, static magnetic field effects, relativistic tunneling with spin corrections, and a covariant Fock‑method description. Accounting for the Coulomb interaction with the residual ion markedly alters photoelectron momentum distributions and boosts ionization rates by orders of magnitude, while relativistic tunneling corrections and spin effects delineate the limits of the nonrelativistic Keldysh theory.

Abstract

We review the status of the theory of ionization of atoms and ions by intense laser radiation (Keldysh's theory). We discuss the applicability of the theory, its relation to the Landau–Dykhne method, and its application to the ionization of atoms by ultrashort nonmonochromatic laser pulses of an arbitrary shape. The semiclassical imaginary time method is applied to describe electron sub-barrier motion using classical equations of motion with an imaginary time i for an electron in the field of an electromagnetic wave. We also discuss tunneling interference of transition amplitudes, a phenomenon occurring due to the existence of several saddle points in the complex time plane and leading to fast oscillations in the momentum distribution of photoelectrons. Nonperturbatively taking the Coulomb interaction between an outgoing electron and the atomic residual into account causes significant changes in the photoelectron momentum distribution and in the level ionization rates, the latter usually increasing by orders of magnitude for both tunneling and multiquantum ionization. The effect of a static magnetic field on the ionization rate and the magnetic cumulation process is examined. The theory of relativistic tunneling is discussed, relativistic and spin corrections to the ionization rate are calculated, and the applicability limits of the nonrelativistic Keldysh theory are determined. Finally, the application of the Fock method to the covariant description of nonlinear ionization in the relativistic regime is discussed.

References

YearCitations

Page 1