We report about a novel scheme for particle detection based on the infrared
quantum counter concept. Its operation consists of a two-step excitation
process of a four level system, that can be realized in rare earth-doped
crystals when a cw pump laser is tuned to the transition from the second to the
fourth level. The incident particle raises the atoms of the active material
into a low lying, metastable energy state, triggering the absorption of the
pump laser to a higher level. Following a rapid non-radiative decay to a
fluorescent level, an optical signal is observed with a conventional detectors.
In order to demonstrate the feasibility of such a scheme, we have investigated
the emission from the fluorescent level 4S3/2 (540 nm band) in an
Er3+-doped YAG crystal pumped by a tunable titanium sapphire laser when it
is irradiated with 60 keV electrons delivered by an electron gun. We have
obtained a clear signature this excitation increases the 4I13/2
metastable level population that can efficiently be exploited to generate a
detectable optical signal