Simulated (or measured) photoabsorption spectra often provide the first indication of how matter interacts with light when irradiated by some radiation source. In addition to the direct, often slowly varying photoabsorption cross-section as a function of the incident photon frequency, such spectra typically exhibit numerous resonances and edges arising from the interaction of the radiation field with the subvalence or even inner-shell electrons. Broadly speaking, these resonances reflect photoexcitation, with its subsequent fluorescence, or the autoionization of bound electrons. Here, a (relativistic) cascade model is developed for estimating the photoabsorption of (many) atoms and multiply charged ions with a complex shell structure across the periodic table. This model helps distinguish between level- and shell-resolved, as well as total photoabsorption, cross-sections, starting from admixtures of selected initial-level populations. Examples are shown for the photoabsorption of C+ ions near the 1s−2p excitation threshold and for Xe2+ ions in the photon energy range from 10 to 200 eV. While the accuracy and resolution of the predicted photoabsortion spectra remain limited due to the additive treatment of resonances and because of missing electronic correlations in the representation of the levels involved, the present implementation is suitable for ions with quite different open-shell structures and may support smart surveys of resonances along different isoelectronic sequences.
Fritzsche et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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