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Hanle Effect for Lifetime Determinations in the Soft X-Ray Regime

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Resumo:By exciting a series of 1s2 S01→1snpP11 transitions in heliumlike nitrogen ions with linearly polarized monochromatic soft x rays at the Elettra facility, we found a change in the angular distribution of the fluorescence sensitive to the principal quantum number n. In particular it is observed that the ratio of emission in directions parallel and perpendicular to the polarization of incident radiation increases with higher n. We find this n dependence to be a manifestation of the Hanle effect, which served as a practical tool for lifetime determinations of optical transitions since its discovery in 1924. In contrast to traditional Hanle effect experiments, in which one varies the magnetic field and considers a particular excited state, we demonstrate a "soft x-ray Hanle effect"which arises in a static magnetic field but for a series of excited states. By comparing experimental data with theoretical predictions, we were able to determine lifetimes ranging from hundreds of femtoseconds to tens of picoseconds of the 1snpP11 levels, which find excellent agreement with atomic-structure calculations. We argue that dedicated soft x-ray measurements could yield lifetime data that are beyond current experimental reach and cannot yet be predicted with sufficient accuracy.
Autores principais:Togawa, Moto
Outros Autores:Richter, Jan; Shah, Chintan; Botz, Marc; Nenninger, Joshua; Danisch, Jonas; Goes, Joschka; Kühn, Steffen; Amaro, Pedro; Mohamed, Awad; Amano, Yuki; Orlando, Stefano; Totani, Roberta; De Simone, Monica; Fritzsche, Stephan; Pfeifer, Thomas; Coreno, Marcello; Surzhykov, Andrey; López-Urrutia, José R.Crespo
Assunto:General Physics and Astronomy
Ano:2024
País:Portugal
Tipo de documento:artigo
Tipo de acesso:acesso aberto
Instituição associada:Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Idioma:inglês
Origem:Repositório Institucional da UNL
Descrição
Resumo:By exciting a series of 1s2 S01→1snpP11 transitions in heliumlike nitrogen ions with linearly polarized monochromatic soft x rays at the Elettra facility, we found a change in the angular distribution of the fluorescence sensitive to the principal quantum number n. In particular it is observed that the ratio of emission in directions parallel and perpendicular to the polarization of incident radiation increases with higher n. We find this n dependence to be a manifestation of the Hanle effect, which served as a practical tool for lifetime determinations of optical transitions since its discovery in 1924. In contrast to traditional Hanle effect experiments, in which one varies the magnetic field and considers a particular excited state, we demonstrate a "soft x-ray Hanle effect"which arises in a static magnetic field but for a series of excited states. By comparing experimental data with theoretical predictions, we were able to determine lifetimes ranging from hundreds of femtoseconds to tens of picoseconds of the 1snpP11 levels, which find excellent agreement with atomic-structure calculations. We argue that dedicated soft x-ray measurements could yield lifetime data that are beyond current experimental reach and cannot yet be predicted with sufficient accuracy.