The optical formation of coherent superposition states, a wavepacket, can allow the study of zeroth-order states, the evolution of which exhibit structural and electronic changes as a function of time: this leads to the notion of a molecular movie. Intramolecular vibrational energy redistribution, due to anharmonic coupling between modes, is the molecular movie considered here. There is no guarantee, however, that the formed superposition will behave semi-classically (e.g. Gaussian wavepacket dynamics) or even as an intuitively useful zeroth-order state. Here we present time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy (TRPES) studies of an electronically excited triatomic molecule wherein the vibrational dynamics must be treated quantum mechanically and the simple picture of population flow between coupled normal modes fails. Specifically, we report on vibronic wavepacket dynamics in the zeroth-order 3pσ2Σu Rydberg state of NO2. This wavepacket exemplifies two general features of excited state dynamics in polyatomic molecules: anharmonic multimodal vibrational coupling (forming polyads); nonadiabatic coupling between nuclear and electronic coordinates, leading to predissociation. The latter suggests that the polyad vibrational states in the zeroth-order 3p Rydberg manifold are quasi-bound and best understood to be scattering resonances. We observed a rapid dephasing of an initially prepared 'bright' valence state into the relatively long-lived 3p Rydberg state whose multimodal vibrational dynamics and decay we monitor as a function of time. Our quantum simulations, based on an effective spectroscopic Hamiltonian, describe the essential features of the multimodal Fermi resonance-driven vibrational dynamics in the 3p state. We also present evidence of polyad-specificity in the state-dependent predissociation rates, leading to free atomic and molecular fragments. We emphasize that a quantum molecular movie is required to visualize wavepacket dynamics in the 3pσ2Σu Rydberg state of NO2.
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ACS Nano
December 2024
Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences, College of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering, Key Laboratory of Polymer Chemistry & Physics, National Biomedical Imaging Center, Peking University, Beijing 100871, People's Republic of China.
Characterizing the structures, interactions, and dynamics of molecules in their native liquid state is a long-existing challenge in chemistry, molecular science, and biophysics with profound scientific significance. Advanced transmission electron microscopy (TEM)-based imaging techniques with the use of graphene emerged as promising tools, mainly due to their performance on spatial and temporal resolution. This review focuses on the various approaches to achieving high-resolution imaging of individual molecules and their transient interactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Protoc
December 2024
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
December 2024
Committee on Computational Neuroscience, Department of Organismal Biology and Anatomy, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637.
Everything that the brain sees must first be encoded by the retina, which maintains a reliable representation of the visual world in many different, complex natural scenes while also adapting to stimulus changes. This study quantifies whether and how the brain selectively encodes stimulus features about scene identity in complex naturalistic environments. While a wealth of previous work has dug into the static and dynamic features of the population code in retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), less is known about how populations form both flexible and reliable encoding in natural moving scenes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Cell
December 2024
Janelia Research Campus, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Ashburn, VA 20147, USA. Electronic address:
Protein synthesis is central to life and requires the ribosome, which catalyzes the stepwise addition of amino acids to a polypeptide chain by undergoing a sequence of structural transformations. Here, we employed high-resolution template matching (HRTM) on cryoelectron microscopy (cryo-EM) images of directly cryofixed living cells to obtain a set of ribosomal configurations covering the entire elongation cycle, with each configuration occurring at its native abundance. HRTM's position and orientation precision and ability to detect small targets (∼300 kDa) made it possible to order these configurations along the reaction coordinate and to reconstruct molecular features of any configuration along the elongation cycle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
November 2024
Institute of Molecular and Clinical Ophthalmology Basel (IOB), Basel, Switzerland.
We studied which retinal area controls short-term axial eye shortening when human subjects were exposed to + 3.0D monocular defocus. A custom-built infrared eye tracker recorded the point of fixation while subjects watched a movie at a 2 m distance.
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