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Experimental Procedure for the Determination of the Number of Paramagnetic Centers
The determination of the number of paramagnetic centers in a given crystal is usually performed by comparing the resonance signal of the unknown centers with that of a calibrated standard. The two most often used standards are CuSO4·5H2O and DPPH. In the procedure described below the number of "spins" is obtained from a measurement of the reflection coefficient of a reflection cavity containing the spins; or more specifically from the change in the reflection coefficient between the "on resonance" and "off resonance" conditions.
The measurements can be performed with the aid of the conventional equipment for the measurement of reflection coefficients. Great simplification is realized when a variable coupling cavity [1] is used
The laser
This article is intended as a review of the field of optical masers, or lasers as they have come to be known, summarizing both theory and practice. It starts with a theoretical section in which black body radiation theory is used to introduce the concepts of spontaneous and induced transitions. This is followed by the derivation of the Schawlow-Townes instability (start-oscillation) condition and a description of the different laser media. Other topics treated include: optical pumping, experimental techniques, output power and noise. The sections on optical resonators and communications which conclude the paper have been slightly emphasized since, perhaps to a larger extent than the other topics covered in this paper, they coincide with traditional areas of interest of microwave and communications engineers
Charge-exchange mechanisms at the threshold for inelasticity in Ne+ collisions with surfaces
We present a study on scattering of 100–1400 eV Ne+ ions off Mg, Al, Si, and P surfaces. Exit energy distributions and yields of single-scattered Ne+ and Ne2+ were separately measured to investigate charge exchange mechanisms occurring at the onset of inelastic losses in binary hard collision events. At low incident energies, collisions appear elastic and projectile ion survival is dominated by nonlocal Auger-type neutralization involving the target valence band. However, once a critical Rmin (distance of closest approach) is reached, three phenomena occur simultaneously: Ne2+ generation, reversal of the Ne+ yield trend, and inelastic losses in Ne+ and Ne2+. Rmin values for the Ne2+ turn-on agree very well with the L-shell overlap distances of the colliding partners, suggesting that electron transfer involving the highly promoted 4fsigma molecular orbital (correlated to the Ne 2p) at close internuclear distance (~0.5 Å) is responsible. For the Ne+ yield, a clear transition from nonlocal neutralization to Rmin-dependent collision induced neutralization was observed. Binary collision inelasticities (Qbin) were evaluated for Ne+ and Ne2+ off Al and Si by taking into account electron straggling. Saturation-like behavior at RminNe** (2p43s2, 41–45 eV) and Ne+-->Ne+** (2p33s2/3s3p, 69–72 eV), followed by autoionization as the projectile leaves the surface region to give Ne+ and Ne2+. In contrast, Qbin values for Ne2+ at the +2 turn-on were seen much lower (35–40 eV off Al, 55–60 eV off Si) than that required for double promotion—eliminating the possibility that Ne2+ is only generated in double excitation of surviving Ne+. Thus single-electron excitation appears to be more important in the threshold region compared to the two-electron events seen at higher collision energies. In addition, the Ne+[Single Bond]P system shows striking similarities with the other target cases from the perspective of a well-defined Ne2+ turn-on, continually increasing Ne2+ yield with impact energy, and inelasticity values which point to the same 4fsigma excitation pathway. The decreasing Rmin requirement for higher target Z in terms of Ne2+ production has been confirmed for the Mg through P series, where hard collision excitation is governed by L-shell orbital overlaps
Low-energy ion beamline scattering apparatus for surface science investigations
We report on the design, construction, and performance of a high current (monolayers/s), mass-filtered ion beamline system for surface scattering studies using inert and reactive species at collision energies below 1500 eV. The system combines a high-density inductively coupled plasma ion source, high-voltage floating beam transport line with magnet mass-filter and neutral stripping, decelerator, and broad based detection capabilities (ions and neutrals in both mass and energy) for products leaving the target surface. The entire system was designed from the ground up to be a robust platform to study ion-surface interactions from a more global perspective, i.e., high fluxes (>100 µA/cm2) of a single ion species at low, tunable energy (50–1400±5 eV full width half maximum) can be delivered to a grounded target under ultrahigh vacuum conditions. The high current at low energy problem is solved using an accel-decel transport scheme where ions are created at the desired collision energy in the plasma source, extracted and accelerated to high transport energy (20 keV to fight space charge repulsion), and then decelerated back down to their original creation potential right before impacting the grounded target. Scattered species and those originating from the surface are directly analyzed in energy and mass using a triply pumped, hybrid detector composed of an electron impact ionizer, hemispherical electrostatic sector, and rf/dc quadrupole in series. With such a system, the collision kinematics, charge exchange, and chemistry occurring on the target surface can be separated by fully analyzing the scattered product flux. Key design aspects of the plasma source, beamline, and detection system are emphasized here to highlight how to work around physical limitations associated with high beam flux at low energy, pumping requirements, beam focusing, and scattered product analysis. Operational details of the beamline are discussed from the perspective of available beam current, mass resolution, projectile energy spread, and energy tunability. As well, performance of the overall system is demonstrated through three proof-of-concept examples: (1) elastic binary collisions at low energy, (2) core-level charge exchange reactions involving 20Ne+ with Mg/Al/Si/P targets, and (3) reactive scattering of CF2+/CF3+ off Si. These studies clearly demonstrate why low, tunable incident energy, as well as mass and energy filtering of products leaving the target surface is advantageous and often essential for studies of inelastic energy losses, hard-collision charge exchange, and chemical reactions that occur during ion-surface scattering
Evidence of Simultaneous Double-Electron Promotion in F+ Collisions with Surfaces
A high-flux beam of mass-filtered F+ at low energy (100–1300 eV) was scattered off Al and Si surfaces to study core-level excitations of F0 and F+. Elastic scattering behavior for F+ was observed at energies 450 (700) eV off Al (Si) produces F2+—behavior which is remarkably similar to Ne+ off the same surfaces. Inelasticities measured for single collision events agree well with the energy deficits required to form (doubly excited) F** and F+** states from F0 and F+, respectively; these excited species most likely decay to inelastic F+ and F2+ via autoionization
The effect of background knowledge on young children's comprehension of explicit and implicit information
Bibliography: leaves 15-16Supported in part by the National Institute of Educatio
Damping of gravitational waves by matter
We develop a unified description, via the Boltzmann equation, of damping of
gravitational waves by matter, incorporating collisions. We identify two
physically distinct damping mechanisms -- collisional and Landau damping. We
first consider damping in flat spacetime, and then generalize the results to
allow for cosmological expansion. In the first regime, maximal collisional
damping of a gravitational wave, independent of the details of the collisions
in the matter is, as we show, significant only when its wavelength is
comparable to the size of the horizon. Thus damping by intergalactic or
interstellar matter for all but primordial gravitational radiation can be
neglected. Although collisions in matter lead to a shear viscosity, they also
act to erase anisotropic stresses, thus suppressing the damping of
gravitational waves. Damping of primordial gravitational waves remains
possible. We generalize Weinberg's calculation of gravitational wave damping,
now including collisions and particles of finite mass, and interpret the
collisionless limit in terms of Landau damping. While Landau damping of
gravitational waves cannot occur in flat spacetime, the expansion of the
universe allows such damping by spreading the frequency of a gravitational wave
of given wavevector.Comment: 9 pages (10 pages in journal), published versio
Quantum-mechanical communication theory
Optimum signal reception using quantum-mechanical communication theor
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