104 research outputs found
Calculation of isotope shifts and relativistic shifts in CI, CII, CIII and CIV
We present an accurate ab initio method of calculating isotope shifts and
relativistic shifts in atomic spectra. We test the method on neutral carbon and
three carbon ions. The relativistic shift of carbon lines may allow them to be
included in analyses of quasar absorption spectra that seek to measure possible
variations in the fine structure constant, alpha, over the lifetime of the
Universe. Carbon isotope shifts can be used to measure isotope abundances in
gas clouds: isotope abundances are potentially an important source of
systematic error in the alpha-variation studies. These abundances are also
needed to study nuclear reactions in stars and supernovae, and test models of
chemical evolution of the Universe
Polarization dependent photoionization cross-sections and radiative lifetimes of atomic states in Ba
The photoionization cross-sections of two even-parity excited states, and , of atomic Ba at the ionization-laser wavelength of
556.6 nm were measured. We found that the total cross-section depends on the
relative polarization of the atoms and the ionization-laser light. With
density-matrix algebra, we show that, in general, there are at most three
parameters in the photoionization cross-section. Some of these parameters are
determined in this work. We also present the measurement of the radiative
lifetime of five even-parity excited states of barium.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
Isotope shifts and hyperfine structure of the Fe I 372 nm resonance line
We report measurements of the isotope shifts of the Fe I resonance line at 372 nm between all four stable
isotopes Fe, Fe, Fe, and Fe, as well as the
complete hyperfine structure of that line for Fe, the only stable
isotope having a non-zero nuclear spin. The field and specific mass shift
coefficients of the transition have been derived from the data, as well as the
experimental value for the hyperfine structure magnetic dipole coupling
constant of the excited state of the transition in Fe: MHz. The measurements were done by means of Doppler-free
laser saturated-absorption spectroscopy in a Fe-Ar hollow cathode using both
natural and enriched iron samples. The measured isotope shifts and hyperfine
constants are reported with uncertainties at the percent level.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Investigation of cold Rb Rydberg atoms in a magneto-optical trap
We present our results on the experiments with cold Rb Rydberg atoms in a
magneto-optical trap (MOT). Characteristic features of our experiment were the
excitation of Rydberg atoms in a small volume within the cold atom cloud and
sorting of the measured signals and spectra over the number of registered
Rydberg atoms. We have measured the effective lifetime of the Rydberg state
37P, as well as its polarizability in a weak electric field. The results are in
good agreement with the theoretical calculations. We have shown that
localization of the small excitation volume around the zero-magnetic-field
point makes possible to increase the spectral resolution and to obtain narrow
microwave resonances in Rydberg atoms without switching off the MOT quadrupole
magnetic field. We have measured the dependence of the amplitude of the
dipole-dipole interaction resonances on the number of Rydberg atoms, which has
a linear character and agrees with the theory for weak dipole-dipole
interaction.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures. To appear in JETP, 2009. Typo in eq.(7) corrected
in v
Collisional perturbation of radio-frequency E1 transitions in an atomic beam of dysprosium
We have studied collisional perturbations of radio-frequency (rf)
electric-dipole (E1) transitions between the nearly degenerate opposite-parity
levels in atomic dysprosium (Dy) in the presence of 10 to 80 Torr of
H, N, He, Ar, Ne, Kr, and Xe. Collisional broadening and
shift of the resonance, as well as the attenuation of the signal amplitude are
observed to be proportional to the foreign-gas density with the exception of
H and Ne, for which no shifts were observed. Corresponding rates and cross
sections are presented. In addition, rates and cross sections for O are
extracted from measurements using air as foreign gas. The primary motivation
for this study is the need for accurate determination of the shift rates, which
are needed in a laboratory search for the temporal variation of the
fine-structure constant [A. T. Nguyen, D. Budker, S. K. Lamoreaux, and J. R.
Torgerson, Phys. Rev. A \textbf{69}, 22105 (2004)].Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
Broadening and intensity redistribution in the Na() hyperfine excitation spectra due to optical pumping in the weak excitation limit
Detailed analysis of spectral line broadening and variations in relative
intensities of hyperfine spectral components due to optical pumping is
presented. Hyperfine levels of sodium and levels are
selectively excited in a supersonic beam at various laser intensities under the
conditions when optical pumping time is shorter than transit time of atoms
through the laser beam. The excitation spectra exhibit significant line
broadening at laser intensities well below the saturation intensity, and
redistribution of intensities of hyperfine spectral components is observed,
which in some cases is contradicting with intuitive expectations. Theoretical
analysis of the dynamics of optical pumping shows that spectral line broadening
depends sensitively on branching coefficient of the laser-driven transition.
Analytical expressions for branching ratio dependent critical Rabi frequency
and critical laser intensity are derived, which give the threshold for onset of
noticeable line broadening by optical pumping. Transitions with larger and
smaller branching coefficients are relatively less affected. The theoretical
excitation spectra were calculated numerically by solving density matrix
equations of motion using the split propagation technique, and they well
reproduce the observed effects of line broadening and peak intensity
variations. The calculations also show that presence of dark (i.e., not laser-
coupled) Zeeeman sublevels in the lower state results in effective branching
coefficients which vary with laser intensity and differ from those implied by
the sum rules, and this can lead to peculiar changes in peak ratios of
hyperfine components of the spectra.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figure
Atom made from charged elementary black hole
It is believed that there may have been a large number of black holes formed
in the very early universe. These would have quantised masses. A charged
``elementary black hole'' (with the minimum possible mass) can capture
electrons, protons and other charged particles to form a ``black hole atom''.
We find the spectrum of such an object with a view to laboratory and
astronomical observation of them, and estimate the lifetime of the bound
states. There is no limit to the charge of the black hole, which gives us the
possibility of observing Z>137 bound states and transitions at the lower
continuum. Negatively charged black holes can capture protons. For Z>1, the
orbiting protons will coalesce to form a nucleus (after beta-decay of some
protons to neutrons), with a stability curve different to that of free nuclei.
In this system there is also the distinct possibility of single quark capture.
This leads to the formation of a coloured black hole that plays the role of an
extremely heavy quark interacting strongly with the other two quarks. Finally
we consider atoms formed with much larger black holes.Comment: 22 pages, 4 figure
Fine and hyperfine structure of the muonic ^3He ion
On the basis of quasipotential approach to the bound state problem in QED we
calculate the vacuum polarization, relativistic, recoil, structure corrections
of orders and to the fine structure interval and to the hyperfine structure of the energy
levels and in muonic ion. The resulting values
, , provide reliable
guidelines in performing a comparison with the relevant experimental data.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, 3 table
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