A universal mechanism of ultrafast two-electron orbital swap is discovered through two-photon sequential double ionization of Li. After a $1s$ electron in Li is ionized by absorbing an EUV photon, the other two bound electrons located on two different shells have either parallel or antiparallel spin orientations. In the latter case, these two electrons are in the superposition of the singlet and triplet states with different energies, forming a quantum beat and giving rise to the two-electron orbital swap with a period of several hundred attoseconds. The orbital swap mechanism can be used to manipulate the spin polarization of photoelectron pairs by conceiving the attosecond-pump attosecond-probe strategy, and thus serves as a knob to control spin-resolved multielectron ultrafast dynamics.
Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures