The reaction N+NO-->N(2)+O was studied by means of the time-dependent real wave-packet (WP) method and the J-shifting approximation. We consider the ground 1 (3)A(") and first excited 1 (3)A(') triplet states, which correlate with both reactants and products, using analytical potential energy surfaces (PESs) recently developed in our group. This work extends our previous quantum dynamics study, and probabilities, cross sections, and rate constants were calculated and interpreted on the basis of the different shapes of the PESs (barrierless 1 (3)A(") and with barrier 1 (3)A(') surfaces, respectively). The WP rate constant (k(1)) shows a weak dependence on T(200-2500 K), as the dominant contribution to reactivity is provided by the barrierless ground PES. There is a good agreement of WP k(1) with the measurements and variational transition state theory (VTST) data, and also between the WP and VTST k(1)(1 (3)A(")) results. Nevertheless, there is a large discrepancy between the WP and VTST k(1)(1 (3)A(')) results. Product state distributions were also calculated for the much more reactive 1 (3)A(") PES. There is an excellent agreement with the experimental average fraction of vibrational energy in N(2)(25+/-3%), the only measured dynamics property of this reaction.
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Phys Rev E
November 2024
Department of Physics, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3PU, United Kingdom.
We present two methods for computing the dynamic structure factor for warm dense hydrogen without invoking either the Born-Oppenheimer approximation or the Chihara decomposition, by employing a wave-packet description that resolves the electron dynamics during ion evolution. First, a semiclassical method is discussed, which is corrected based on known quantum constraints, and second, a direct computation of the density response function within the molecular dynamics. The wave-packet models are compared to PIMC and DFT-MD for the static and low-frequency behavior.
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October 2024
Institute for Theoretical Physics, Vienna University of Technology, Wiedner Hauptstraße 8-10, A-1040 Vienna, Austria.
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August 2024
TCM Group, Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge, JJ Thomson Avenue, Cambridge CB3 0HE, United Kingdom.
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May 2024
Racah Institute of Physics, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem 91904, Israel.
A short, abrupt increase in energy injection rate into steady strongly driven rotating turbulent flow is used as a probe for energy transfer in the system. The injected excessive energy is localized in time and space and its spectra differ from those of the steady turbulent flow. This allows measuring energy transfer rates, in three different domains: In real space, the injected energy propagates within the turbulent field, as a wave packet of inertial waves.
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March 2024
State Key Laboratory of Precision Spectroscopy, East China Normal University, Shanghai 200241, China.
We explored the collision-induced vibrational decoherence of singly ionized D_{2} molecules inside a helium nanodroplet. By using the pump-probe reaction microscopy with few-cycle laser pulses, we captured in real time the collision-induced ultrafast dissipation of vibrational nuclear wave packet dynamics of D_{2}^{+} ion embedded in the droplet. Because of the strong coupling of excited molecular cations with the surrounding solvent, the vibrational coherence of D_{2}^{+} in the droplet interior only lasts for a few vibrational periods and completely collapses within 140 fs.
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