The realization of the dipole (γ, γ) method and its application to determine the absolute optical oscillator strengths of helium

The dipole (γ, γ) method, which is the inelastic x-ray scattering operated at a negligibly small momentum transfer, is proposed and realized to determine the absolute optical oscillator strengths of the vanlence-shell excitations of atoms and molecules. Compared with the conventionally used photoabs...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2015-12, Vol.5 (1), p.18350-18350, Article 18350
Hauptverfasser: Xu, Long-Quan, Liu, Ya-Wei, Kang, Xu, Ni, Dong-Dong, Yang, Ke, Hiraoka, Nozomu, Tsuei, Ku-Ding, Zhu, Lin-Fan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The dipole (γ, γ) method, which is the inelastic x-ray scattering operated at a negligibly small momentum transfer, is proposed and realized to determine the absolute optical oscillator strengths of the vanlence-shell excitations of atoms and molecules. Compared with the conventionally used photoabsorption method, this new method is free from the line saturation effect, which can seriously limit the accuracies of the measured photoabsorption cross sections for discrete transitions with narrow natural linewidths. Furthermore, the Bethe-Born conversion factor of the dipole (γ, γ) method varies much more slowly with the excitation energy than does that of the dipole (e, e) method. Absolute optical oscillator strengths for the excitations of 1s 2  → 1 s n p( n  = 3 − 7) of atomic helium have been determined using the high-resolution dipole (γ, γ) method and the excellent agreement of the present measurements with both those measured by the dipole (e, e) method and the previous theoretical calculations indicates that the dipole (γ, γ) method is a powerful tool to measure the absolute optical oscillator strengths of the valence-shell excitations of atoms and molecules.
ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/srep18350