Frequency-modulation (FM) spectroscopy has been extended to the
vacuum-ultraviolet (VUV) range of the electromagnetic spectrum. Coherent VUV
laser radiation is produced by resonance-enhanced sum-frequency mixing
(νVUV=2νUV+ν2) in Kr and Xe using two
near-Fourier-transform-limited laser pulses of frequencies νUV
and ν2. Sidebands generated in the output of the second laser (ν2)
using an electro-optical modulator operating at the frequency
νmod are directly transfered to the VUV and used to record FM
spectra. Demodulation is demonstrated both at νmod and
2νmod. The main advantages of the method are that its
sensitivity is not reduced by pulse-to-pulse fluctuations of the VUV laser
intensity, compared to VUV absorption spectroscopy is its background-free
nature, the fact that its implementation using table-top laser equipment is
straightforward and that it can be used to record VUV absorption spectra of
cold samples in skimmed supersonic beams simultaneously with
laser-induced-fluorescence and photoionization spectra. To illustrate these
advantages we present VUV FM spectra of Ar, Kr, and N2 in selected regions
between 105000cm−1 and 122000cm−1.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figure