Radiofrequency-driven resonant spin rotators are routinely used as standard
instruments in polarization experiments in particle and nuclear physics.
Maintaining the continuous exact parametric spin-resonance condition of the
equality of the spin rotator and the spin precession frequency during operation
constitutes one of the challenges. We present a detailed analytic description
of the impact of detuning the exact spin resonance on the vertical and the
in-plane precessing components of the polarization. An important part of the
formalism presented here is the consideration of experimentally relevant
spin-decoherence effects. We discuss applications of the developed formalism to
the interpretation of the experimental data on the novel pilot bunch approach
to control the spin-resonance condition during the operation of the
radiofrequency-driven Wien filter that is used as a spin rotator in the first
direct deuteron electric dipole moment measurement at COSY. We emphasize the
potential importance of the hitherto unexplored phase of the envelope of the
horizontal polarization as an indicator of the stability of the
radiofrequency-driven spin rotations in storage rings. The work presented here
serves as a satellite publication to the work published concurrently on the
proof of principle experiment about the so-called pilot bunch approach that was
developed to provide co-magnetometry for the deuteron electric dipole moment
experiment at COSY.Comment: 31 pages, 10 figures, 5 table