JOURNAL OF PHYSICS. B, ATOMIC MOLECULAR AND OPTICAL PHYSICS
Abstract
The valence shell electronic states of pyridazine have been studied experimentally, by
recording the photoabsorption spectrum, and theoretically, by calculating oscillator strengths
and excitation energies. The absolute photoabsorption cross section has been measured
between 4 and 40 eV, using synchrotron radiation, and is dominated by prominent bands
associated with intravalence transitions. In contrast, structure due to Rydberg excitations is
weak. One Rydberg state, belonging to a series converging onto the ̃X 2B2 state limit has been
observed and assigned. The accompanying vibrational structure has been characterized by
analogy with that in the corresponding photoelectron band. Vibrational progressions
associated with Rydberg states belonging to one or more series converging onto the ̃A 2A2
state limit have also been observed. The absorption structure associated with these series is
complex and only tentative assignments have been proposed for the Rydberg states. The
time-dependent version of density functional theory has been used to calculate oscillator
strengths and excitation energies for the optically allowed singlet–singlet valence transitions
and also to obtain the excitation energies for electric-dipole-forbidden and/or spin-forbidden
transitions. The valence shell photoionization dynamics have been investigated theoretically
by calculating photoelectron angular distributions and photoionization partial cross sections of
the four outermost orbitals. In addition, the ground state outer valence electronic configuration
has been obtained at the complete active space self-consistent field and the N-electron valence
state perturbation theory to second-order levels of theory.