48 research outputs found
A room-temperature alternating current susceptometer - Data analysis, calibration, and test
An AC susceptometer operating in the range of 10 Hz to 100 kHz and at room
temperature is designed, built, calibrated and used to characterize the
magnetic behaviour of coated magnetic nanoparticles. Other weakly magnetic
materials (in amounts of some millilitres) can be analyzed as well. The setup
makes use of a DAQ-based acquisition system in order to determine the amplitude
and the phase of the sample magnetization as a function of the frequency of the
driving magnetic field, which is powered by a digital waveform generator. A
specific acquisition strategy makes the response directly proportional to the
sample susceptibility, taking advantage of the differential nature of the coil
assembly. A calibration method based on conductive samples is developed.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, 19 ref
Measurement of XeI and XeII velocity in the near exit plane of a low-power Hall effect thruster by light induced fluorescence spectroscopy
Near exit plane non-resonant light induced fluorescence spectroscopy is
performed in a Hall effect low-power Xenon thruster at discharge voltage of
250V and anode flow rate of 0.7mg/sec. Measurement of the axial and radial
velocity components are performed, exciting the 6s[3/2]_2-->6p[3/2]_2
transition at 823.16nm in XeI and the 5d[4]_(7/2)-->6p[3]_(5/2) transition at
834.724nm in XeII. No significant deviation from the thermal velocity is
observed for XeI. Two most probable ion velocities are registered at a given
position with respect to the thruster axis, which are mainly attributed to
different areas of creation of ions inside the acceleration channel. The
spatial resolution of the set-up is limited by the laser beam size (radius of
the order of 0.5mm) and the fluorescence collection optics, which have a view
spot diameter of 8mm.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figure
Larmor frequency dressing by an anharmonic transverse magnetic field
We present a theoretical and experimental study of spin precession in the
presence of both a static and an orthogonal oscillating magnetic field, which
is nonresonant, not harmonically related to the Larmor precession, and of
arbitrary strength. Due to the intrinsic nonlinearity of the system, previous
models that account only for the simple sinusoidal case cannot be applied. We
suggest an alternative approach and develop a model that closely agrees with
experimental data produced by an optical-pumping atomic magnetometer. We
demonstrate that an appropriately designed nonharmonic field makes it possible
to extract a linear response to a weak dc transverse field, despite the scalar
nature of the magnetometer, which normally causes a much weaker, second-order
response.Comment: Published version has some minor changes; 22 pages and 8 picture
Ion dynamic characterization using phase-resolved laser-induced fluorescence spectroscopy in low power Hall effect thruster
Valuable information on the dynamics of the plasma constituents in Hall
effect thrusters can be extracted with minimally intrusive means such as
time-resolved light-induced fluorescence diagnostics. In general, maps of the
ion velocity distribution function are built for plasma characterization using
different techniques. One of the most relevant phenomena under investigation is
the so called breathing mode that is characterized by intense and
quasi-periodic oscillation of the discharge current. The goal of this work is
to propose a new approach for plasma dynamic studies based on parallelized
laser-induced fluorescence spectroscopy with phase-resolution within the
breathing period.Comment: 6 pages, 11 figures, 29 reference
A new class of sum rules for products of Bessel functions
In this paper we derive a new class of sum rules for products of the Bessel
functions of first kind. Using standard algebraic manipulations we extend some
of the well known properties of . Some physical applications of the
results are also discussed. A comparison with the Newberger[J. Math. Phys.
\textbf{23} (1982) 1278] sum rules is performed on a typical example.Comment: Published in Journal of Mathematical Physics, 9 pages, no picture
Dual channel self-oscillating optical magnetometer
We report on a two-channel magnetometer based on nonlinear magneto-optical
rotation in a Cs glass cell with buffer gas. The Cs atoms are optically pumped
and probed by free running diode lasers tuned to the D line. A wide
frequency modulation of the pump laser is used to produce both synchronous
Zeeman optical pumping and hyperfine repumping. The magnetometer works in an
unshielded environment and spurious signal from distant magnetic sources is
rejected by means of differential measurement. In this regime the magnetometer
simultaneously gives the magnetic field modulus and the field difference.
Rejection of the common-mode noise allows for high-resolution magnetometry
with a sensitivity of \pthz{2}. This sensitivity, in conjunction with long-term
stability and a large bandwidth, makes possible to detect water proton
magnetization and its free induction decay in a measurement volume of 5 cmComment: 13 pages, 9 figures. Improved version (v2). Accepted for publicatio
Inhibition of electromagnetically induced absorption due to excited state decoherence in Rb vapor
The explanation presented in [Taichenachev et al, Phys. Rev. A {\bf 61},
011802 (2000)] according to which the electromagnetically induced absorption
(EIA) resonances observed in degenerate two level systems are due to coherence
transfer from the excited to the ground state is experimentally tested in a
Hanle type experiment observing the parametric resonance on the line of
Rb. While EIA occurs in the transition in a cell
containing only vapor, collisions with a buffer gas ( of )
cause the sign reversal of this resonance as a consequence of collisional
decoherence of the excited state. A theoretical model in good qualitative
agreement with the experimental results is presented.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Physical Review
Temporal build-up of electromagnetically induced transparency and absorption resonances in degenerate two-level transitions
The temporal evolution of electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) and
absorption (EIA) coherence resonances in pump-probe spectroscopy of degenerate
two-level atomic transition is studied for light intensities below saturation.
Analytical expression for the transient absorption spectra are given for simple
model systems and a model for the calculation of the time dependent response of
realistic atomic transitions, where the Zeeman degeneracy is fully accounted
for, is presented. EIT and EIA resonances have a similar (opposite sign) time
dependent lineshape, however, the EIA evolution is slower and thus narrower
lines are observed for long interaction time. Qualitative agreement with the
theoretical predictions is obtained for the transient probe absorption on the
line in an atomic beam experiment.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Features of Magneto-Optical Resonances in an Elliptically Polarized Traveling Light Wave
The parameters of nonlinear absorption magneto-optical resonances in the
Hanle configuration have been studied as functions of the ellipticity of a
traveling light wave. It has been found that these parameters (amplitude,
width, and amplitude-to-width ratio) depend strongly on the polarization of the
light wave. In particular, the resonance amplitude can increase by more than an
order of magnitude when the polarization changes from linear to optimal
elliptic. It has been shown that this effect is associated with the Doppler
frequency shift for atoms in a gas. The theoretical results have been
corroborated in experiments in Rb vapor.Comment: 5 page
Spin randomization of light-induced desorbed Rb atoms
We present the first experimental observation of atomic spin randomization of Rb atoms released by light-induced atomic desorption (LIAD). A natural mixture of Rb atoms contained in paraffin and PDMS coated glass cells is irradiated by a free-running diode laser light tuned to the Rb D2 resonance line. The transmission spectrum of the Rb vapor is thus modified and shows a strong enhancement of the hyperfine optical pumping as the light intensity is increased and the laser-frequency scanning rate is decreased. The D2 line spectra are compared for two cases: without and with illumination of the walls of the cell by a UV lamp centered around the wavelength of 404 nm. A simple theoretical model based on the solution of the rate balance equations is introduced in order to analyze the experimental results