Abstract. An overview of recent theoretical progress to accurately describe non dissociative and dissociative ionization of molecules exposed to synchrotron radiation and ultrashort uv/xuv laser pulses is presented. The success of recent theoretical approaches rely on their ability to account for both the electronic and nuclear degrees of freedom. This is essential to describe the delicate interplay between the electronic motion and the molecule's vibration, especially in those cases where ionization occurs in a time scale comparable to that of the vibrational motion. Some of the most successful applications and the new physics that has emerged by comparing with recent kinematically complete experiments on H2 and D2 will be discussed.
IntroductionMolecular ionization is one of the most elementary processes that occurs in the upper atmosphere [1] and in interstellar molecular clouds [2]. Since in molecules the absorbed energy is shared between electronic and nuclear degrees of freedom, the remaining molecular ion can be left in an excited vibrational or dissociative state. This is at variance with atomic ionization where the energy is entirely absorbed by the electrons. In early pictures of molecular ionization, the nuclear motion was either ignored or described in terms of the Franck-Condon (FC) approximation, in which electronic processes occurring at the equilibrium position of the nuclei are weighted by the squared overlap between the initial and final vibrational states. With the advent of kinematically complete experiments [3,4], in which the momenta of all charged particles is determined, new phenomena with an intrinsic molecular origin have been discovered (see, e.g., [5][6][7][8][9][10][11]). Also the above pictures have been revealed to be incomplete. In this manuscript, the important role of nuclear dynamics in molecular ionization produced by synchrotron radiation and ultrashort pulses will be demonstrated by means of recent ab initio theoretical calculations that account for all electronic and vibrational degrees of freedom.In particular, recent results for electron angular distributions from fixed-in-space molecules will be analyzed and compared with kinematically complete photoionization experiments using synchrotron radiation. These include double and single photoionization of H 2 (D 2 ). The range of excess photon energies considered goes from a few to several hundreds of eV. Also, multiphoton ionization of molecules by vuv ultrashort pulses will be discussed. In particular, the new physics that can be expected by varying pulse duration and intensity will be analyzed.