Publications by authors named "Dmitri Chestakov"

Van der Waals binding energies for the X-O(2) complexes (X=Xe, CH(3)I, C(3)H(6), C(6)H(12)) are determined by analysis of experimental velocity map imaging data for O((3)P(2)) atoms arising from UV-photodissociation of the complex [A. V. Baklanov et al.

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Sliced velocity-map imaging has been used to measure photofragment scattering distributions for the O((3)P(2)) and O((3)P(1)) products of O(2) photolysis following laser excitation into the Herzberg continuum between 205 and 241 nm. The images were analysed to extract the photofragment spatial anisotropy parameter, β, together with the alignment parameters a(∥), a(⊥), a(⊥), and Re[a(∥, ⊥)]. Our alignment measurements bridge the gap between the recent 193 nm measurement of Brouard et al.

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The effect of a local environment on the photodissociation of molecular oxygen is investigated in the van der Waals complex X-O(2) (X=CH(3)I, C(3)H(6), C(6)H(12), and Xe). A single laser operating at wavelengths around 226 nm is used for both photodissociation of the van der Waals complex and simultaneous detection of the O((3)P(J),J=2,1,0) atom photoproduct via (2+1) resonance enhanced multiphoton ionization. The kinetic energy distribution (KED) and angular anisotropy of the product O atom recoil in this dissociation are measured using the velocity map imaging technique configured for either full ("crush") or partial ("slice") detection of the three-dimensional O((3)P(J)) atom product Newton sphere.

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Ion imaging methods are making ever greater impact on studies of gas phase molecular reaction dynamics. This article traces the evolution of the technique, highlights some of the more important breakthroughs with regards to improving image resolution and in image processing and analysis methods, and then proceeds to illustrate some of the many applications to which the technique is now being applied--most notably in studies of molecular photodissociation and of bimolecular reaction dynamics.

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The CH(3)I A-state-assisted photofragmentation of the (CH(3)I)(2) van der Waals dimer at 248 nm and nearby wavelengths has been revisited experimentally using the time-of-flight mass spectrometry with supersonic and effusive molecular beams and the "velocity map imaging" technique. The processes underlying the appearance of two main (CH(3)I)(2) cluster-specific features in the mass spectra, namely, I(2)(+) and translationally "hot" I(+) ions, have been studied. Translationally hot I(+) ions with an average kinetic energy of 0.

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