Curs 2011
Curs 2011
Curs 2011
SPECTROSCOPY
&
LASERS
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Lecturer Dr. Iulian Ionita
PLASMAS
LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
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Atomic spectra.
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
Conclusions:
1. The sight provides us information
about matter
2. from longer distance than any other
sense.
3. To have a correct information we need
to calibrate it!
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
PHOTONICS =
technology using photons:
- Light sources
- Displays
- Photodetectors
- Telecommunications
- Memory devices (data storage)
- Analyze techniques
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- Imaging techniques
- Computers
PLASMAS
LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
PHOTONICS =
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Most of what we know about the universe comes from studying the
interaction of light and matter, which makes spectroscopy a
fundamental technique in understanding the world around us.
PLASMAS
LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
The LASE Plenary at Photonics West hosted the father of the laser, Nobel laureate
Charles Townes, on Wednesday 24 January 2008. Townes explained the origins of the
first laser (actually a maser), derived from his work on microwave spectroscopy of
molecules.
Clearly, the laser has evolved considerably since 1954, and laser technology is now
ubiquitous in modern life. For Townes, this highlighted how the results of basic research
can contain immense unexpected benefits. He commented that industry and government
politicians need to see that the long-term payoff potential of basic research extends well
beyond the next fiscal cycle. Townes also discussed how rapidly the development of the
laser progressed once the initial ideas were circulated, showing the overall importance of
community to the development of new technology.
Another theme of Townes's talk was his illustration of how new ideas are often resisted by
the acknowledged experts in the field. Townes related how many scientists, among
them Niels Bohr and his department chairs at Columbia, thought that the laser was
theoretically impossible. Even the Bell Labs patent office refused to entertain a
patent on the laser because it lacked a direct application to communications.
Scientists and representatives of the multi-million dollar laser industry honored Townes
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with a plaque and a lengthy standing ovation for his work on the laser and contributions
to science. When asked what fields might be ripe for a breakthrough like the laser,
Townes knowingly answered, "all of them," but identified biophysics, nanotechnology, and
negative index of refraction materials as holding special promise.
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
What is a spectrum?
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
History of Spectroscopy
L. spectrum - an appearance, an apparition, from spectare, to
behold
G. skopein - to view
Spectroscopy is used to determine identity, quantity, structure, and
the environment of atoms, molecules, and ions by analyzing the
radiation emitted or absorbed by atoms, molecules, or ions.
Optical spectroscopy is concerned with transitions of valence
electrons.
X-ray spectroscopy is concerned with the transition of inner-core
electrons.
Nuclear magnetic spectroscopy is concerned with transitions
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involving the nucleus.
Mass spectrometry involves the separations of ions based on their
mass.
PLASMAS
LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
One thing that you need to remember is that "light" is a lot more than
just the colored visible light that we can see. In addition to the
traditional "ROY G. BIV" (Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Indigo,
Violet) color spectrum, there are gamma rays, x-rays, ultraviolet
(UV) radiation, infrared (IR) radiation, microwaves and radio waves!
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"ROGVAIV"
(Roşu, Orange, Galben, Verde, Albastru, Indigo, Violet)
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
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reflecting off a sample, you end up with an emission spectrum or
absorption spectrum, as opposed to the continuous spectrum you
would get if you break up a source of all wavelengths of light.
PLASMAS
LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
An emission spectrum in the visible light range may look like the
picture below.
Such a spectrum would be created when material is given extra
energy somehow (it's heated, electrified, radiated with light, etc.)
and that extra energy is later emitted as light energy.
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PLASMAS
LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
An absorption spectrum in the visible light range may look like the
picture below. Such a spectrum would be created when light is
passed through a gas or a liquid, or strikes a solid. Certain
wavelengths of light will be absorbed by the material, and later
emitted in random directions. Most of the wavelengths, however, will
pass through the gas or liquid (or be reflected off the solid) without
being absorbed.
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
If the light that passes through (or reflects off) is then separated into
its component parts, you can see the spectrum of the absorption. In
this case, the wavelengths of light absorbed by the material are
absent in the spectrum, leaving blank spaces behind.
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PLASMAS
LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
V G R
b
n a (Cauchy’s relationship)
2
Fig.2.1
Because λred > λviolet then nR < nV and phase velocity vR > vV (n = c/v). When the
wavefront of the white light is normal incident on the surface of a transparent
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material, as consequence a difference between wavefront of red radiation and
wavefront of violet radiation will appear, which will increase for higher thickness of
the material (Fig. 2.1). This kind of separation of light components is not useful
because is not stationary (ultra-fast – femtosecond!).
PLASMAS
LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
The stationary separation of light in colors is made by optical prism, which is composed by two flat dioptres,
making an angle called prism angle A or refraction angle. The relationships of optical prim are as follow:
sin i n sin r δ
n sin r ' sin i '
i i’
A r r'
r r’
i i ' A
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Fig. 2.2, i = incident angle, i’ = emerging angle, δ = deviation angle, n = refractive index of prism material.
PLASMAS
LASERS
OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
It is a particular case called minimum deviation (when δ has the smallest value), which is
very important because optical aberrations are minimum in that case.
The Prism is in condition of minimum deviation if:
- light ray tracing has a symmetry (i = i’, r = r’) regarding the prism axes, or if
- light ray propagates parallel to the base prism, or in other words,
perpendicular to the prism angle bisector.
At minimum deviation the refraction relationship comes like:
A A
n sin sin
2 2
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angular separated by the prism. Smaller wavelength more G
deviation!
V
PLASMAS
LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
1. Angular Dispersion
d di'
Du
d d i’
i
i’+di’
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
R 100%
d 81%
+d
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Rayleigh principle
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D sin A
di’
R D Du b
dn
R b
dλ
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
1 .5
20 0 4 00 600 800
(n m )
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
Dispersive Projection
Entrance slit Collimator element Objective Exit slit
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Entrance slit
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
Objective
Collimator
Photoplate
(detector)
Slit
Prism
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
Monochromator
(Ebert configuration)
Spectrograph
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(Czerny-Turner configuration)
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
1. Linear dispersion
dx
Dl
d
+d
di’
di '
Dl f f Du
d
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
2. Luminosity (brightness)
2
D
ct 2
f
Numerical Aperture NA
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NA = n*sinθ
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
Fig. 2.19
P’ 1 2
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P
Fig. 2.21
Fig. 2.20
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B C
Fig. 2. 22 Fig. 2.23
Cornu’s Prism
dextrogir levogir
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a b
Fig. 2.24.
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
Fig. 2.25
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
First Spectrophotometer
•
• The Beckman DU was designed from the ground
up, including the hydrogen lamp, monochromator,
and UV-sensitive phototube, in only 14 months.
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PLASMAS
LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
Spectrophotometer
Beckman DU
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
DIFFRACTION GRATING
Diffraction grating was first time used in spectral application by american astronom D.
Rittenhaus in 1786. It was made from hairs.
First theory of diffraction grating was made by Joseph von Fraunhofer, who suggested
manufacture of grating by scratching the glass with a diamond. He suggested also the
grating could operate by reflection.
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Rowland realized first machine to fabricate gratings by mechanical ruling.
PLASMAS
LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
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makes the diffraction maximum sharper, but also much
more intense.
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
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beam.
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
k=2 k=1
N d N k=0
A' B' k=3
k=-1
A B k=-2
Fig. 1
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k = m = diffraction order
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
SPECTROSCOPY
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
Diffraction Grating
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The condition for maximum intensity is the same as that for a double slit.
However, angular separation of the maxima is generally much greater
because the slit spacing is so small for a diffraction grating.
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
SPECTROSCOPY
White light incident on a reflection grating is diffracted: its component
wavelengths emanate in different directions. Note that there is also a white
reflected beam; the grating also acts as a mirror. The figure for a transmission
grating would show the reflected and diffracted light below the grating.
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
SPECTROSCOPY
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
Alb V1 R1 V2 V3 R2 R3
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Fig. 3.4.
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
Characteristics of gratings
di'
1. Angular Dispersion Du
d
kn
Du
cos
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PLASMAS
LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
Characteristics of gratings
R = kN = knL
k – diffraction order,
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N – total number of grooves,
n – grooves density (gr/mm)
L – grating length (mm)
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
dx fkn
Dl f Du
d cos
For small angles linear dispersion is nearly constant.
4. Brightness
Gratings blazed are used for a high brightness of desired order
spectrum (usually 1st). They have asymetric grooves.
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Fig. 3.5.
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
(k+1)
k k()
Free spectral range
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
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Resolvance of Grating
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Examples of Resolvance
R = resolution power,
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dλ = resolution (or Δ λ).
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
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Non-imaging Imaging
(Magnification 1.6)
200 mm 200 mm
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
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Quantum idea
based on
spectroscopic evidences!
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
SPECTROSCOPIC TIMELINE
Gen 1:3 "And God said 'Let there be light' "
Gen 9:13 "I set my bow in the clouds, and it shall be a sign ..."
4 C BC Aristotle recognizes that light was necessary for color to exist
AD 1300 first recorded use of lenses for eyeglasses
1600 Hans Lippershey makes first telescope after two children playing in his
shop put two lenses in front of each other
1609 Galileo produces telescope of power of 30x
1666 Newton observes spectrum obtained from a prism; 1687 publishes
Principia (Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica)
1678 Huygens proposed wave theory of light
1729 Pierre Bouguer notices attenuation of light as it passes through
successive thicknesses of glass
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1733 Joseph Priestly, father of chemistry in America, born
1735 Torbern Bergman born, father of qual and quant inorganic analysis
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
What is light?
The general idea of the theory had been suggested by Robert
Hooke in 1664, but he had not investigated its consequences
in any detail.
Before modern times, only three ways had been suggested in
which light can be produced mechanically.
1. Either the eye may be supposed to send out something
which, so to speak, feels the object (as the Greeks believed);
2. or the object perceived may send out something which hits
or affects the eye (as assumed in the emission theory);
3. or there may be some medium between the eye and the
object, and the object may cause some change in the form
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or condition of this intervening medium and thus affect the
eye (as Hooke and Huygens supposed in their wave or
undulatory theory).
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
SPECTROSCOPIC TIMELINE
1666 Newton observes spectrum obtained from a prism
The Opticks. The Opticks of 1704, which first appeared in English, is Newton's most
comprehensive and readily accessible work on light and color. In Newton's words, the
purpose of the Opticks was 'not to explain the Properties of Light by Hypotheses, but to
propose and prove them by Reason and Experiments.' Divided into three books, the
Opticks moves from definitions, axioms, propositions, and theorems to proof by
experiment. A subtle blend of mathematical reasoning and careful observation, the
Opticks became the model for experimental physics in the 18th century.
The Corpuscular Theory. But the Opticks contained more than experimental results.
During the 17th century it was widely held that light, like sound, consisted of a wave or
undulatory motion, and Newton's major critics in the field of optics--Robert Hooke and
Christiaan Huygens--were articulate spokesmen for this theory. But Newton disagreed.
Although his views evolved over time, Newton's theory of light was essentially
corpuscular, or particulate. In effect, since light (unlike sound) travels in straight lines
and casts a sharp shadow, Newton suggested that light was composed of discrete
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particles moving in straight lines in the manner of inertial bodies. Further, since
experiment had shown that the properties of the separate colors of light were constant
and unchanging, so too, Newton reasoned, was the stuff of light itself-- particles.
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OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
What is light?
LASERS
Newton said: “Rays of light are very small bodies emitted from shining
substances”
He probably said this because light travels (often) in straight lines (shadows).
He had great influence, but also his ideas of light described very well many of
the properties of light (operationally).
“Are not gross bodies and light convertible into one another; and
may not bodies receive much of their activity from the particles of light which
enter into their composition? The changing of bodies into light, and light into
bodies, is very conformable to the course of Nature, which seems delighted with
transmutations.”
“Truth is ever to be found in the simplicity, and not in the multiplicity
and confusion of things.”
He also realized that there must be some sort of ondulatory movement
involved with the interaction of light with matter. Usually, as we will see, the
colored fringes that we see looking at thin plates (Newton’s rings when one
surface is curved) are explained in terms of wave interference (and we will use
this model).
Another quote of Newton’s:
“As stones, by falling upon Water put the Water into an ondulatory
Motion and all Bodies by percussion excite vibrations in the Air; so the Rays of
Light, by impinging on any refracting or reflecting Surface, excite
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vibrations in the … Medium… and, by exciting them agitate the … Body; …
the vibrations thus excited are propagated in the … Medium … and move faster
than the Rays so as to overtake them”. (Newton – Optiks)
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OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
SPECTROSCOPIC TIMELINE
LASERS
1752 Thomas Melville writes of yellow light in flame when sea salt mixed with alcohol
1760 Johann Lambert gives mathematical formula to Bouguer
1776 Alessandro Volta notes different colors when using different sparking materials
1800 F.W. Herschel notes that different amounts of heat passed through different colored
glasses
(In 1800 William Herschel needed a colored filter for his telescope that would transmit a
maximum of light and a minimum of heat. For this purpose, he used a glass prism to
disperse sunlight into its components, and moved thermometers through the spectrum.
The temperature increased as the thermometers were moved from violet to red and
reached a maximum beyond the red end of the visible spectrum, Herschel referred to this
phenomenon as "invisible light“. )
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OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
SPECTROSCOPIC TIMELINE
LASERS
1802 W.H. Wollaston observes dark lines in spectrum from prism (absorption)
1806 John Dalton proposes atomic theory. Daltonism explained.
1817 Josef Fraunhofer maps details of absorption lines in solar spectrum
1826 W.H.F. Talbot notices different salts yield different colored flames
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
Absorption lines in the spectrum of the Sun, first studied and named by Joseph von
Fraunhofer in 1814. Altogether, Fraunhofer found some 700 lines in the solar spectrum.
The nine most prominent he labeled with capital letters A to K, starting at the red end. The
A and B bands are now known to be caused by absorption in Earth's atmosphere, while
the rest are due to absorption in the Sun's photosphere. C and F are now better known as
H-alpha and H-beta; the D lines are of sodium, the H and K lines of calcium, and the G
band by neutral iron and the CH molecule. All these features occur generally in stars of
spectral types F, G, and K.
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PLASMAS
LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
Absorption lines in the spectrum of the Sun, first studied and named by Joseph von
Fraunhofer in 1814. Altogether, Fraunhofer found some 700 lines in the solar spectrum.
The nine most prominent he labeled with capital letters A to K, starting at the red end. The
A and B bands are now known to be caused by absorption in Earth's atmosphere, while
the rest are due to absorption in the Sun's photosphere. C and F are now better known as
H-alpha and H-beta; the D lines are of sodium, the H and K lines of calcium, and the G
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band by neutral iron and the CH molecule. All these features occur generally in stars of
spectral types F, G, and K.
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
f H (hydrogen) 4340
G Fe 4308
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g Ca 4227
h (H-delta) H (hydrogen) 4102
H&K Ca (calcium) 3968 & 3934
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
SPECTROSCOPIC TIMELINE
1838 W.A. Lampadius determines Fe and Ni in Co by comparing colors with standard
solutions
1850 J.J. Foucault measures speed of light in water
1852 August Beer shows logarithmic relation of Lambert
1852 G.G. Stokes used complementary filters to prove absorption at λ1 and emission at λ2
(nonresonance luminescence)
1852 E. Bequerel and J.W. Draper photograph solar spectrum
1852 Charles Wheatstone makes drawing of spark spectrum
1853 A. Muller & J. Duboscq use comparator for matching colors by adjusting solution
thicknesses
1859 G. Kirchhoff and R.W. Bunsen are the first to say that elements have both
characteristic absorption and emission spectra
1859 A.J. Angstrom measures ls in a flame and solar spectrum and compares the two
1868 J.N. Lockyer discovers Helium in solar spectrum and in 1873 describes "long" and
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"short" lines, the first quant work in spectroscopy
1882 H.A. Rowland shows that large concave reflection grating can be used for focusing &
dispersing
1885 J.J. Balmer develops empirical relationship for Hydrogen spectrum
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Hydrogen lamp
SPECTROSCOPY
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OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
Spectral series
LASERS
The most important discovery in regularity of atomic line spectrum was made by J.
Balmer (Swiss) in 1885. He discovered the line frequencies observed in visible range
of hydrogen atom
(λ = 656 nm, 486 nm, 434 nm & 410 nm)
are arranged by empiric formula:
1 1
ν ab R 2 2
2 n
where νab is frequency of emission or absorption line, n = 3, 4 or 5; R is a constant
later called Rydberg’s constant. When the value of n increases the lines become
more frequent and go to a limit value of 365 nm (end of series).
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
SPECTROSCOPIC TIMELINE
1889 H. Ebert develops plane grating optical arrangement
1891 A.A. Michelson invents interferometer
1895 W.C. Roentgen discovers x-rays
1896 Zeeman sees splitting of lines in magnetic field
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1920 W.F. Meggers and P.D. Foote invent microphotometer
1923 A. Smekal publishes theoretical foundation of Raman spectroscopy
1924 Pauli postulates nuclear magnetic moments
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
Also known as Zeeman splitting, the broadening or splitting of a spectral line into several
polarized components when the source is in a strong magnetic field; it is named after the
Dutch physicist Pieter Zeeman (1865-1943). Because the amount of Zeeman splitting and
of polarization depend on the magnetic field strength, this effect provides a power tool
for investigating cosmic magnetic fields. It was first used to map magnetic fields on the Sun,
especially in and around sunspots where the local field strength can be as high as 0.4 tesla
– thousands of times stronger than Earth's magnetic field. Across the Sun as a whole, and in
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the case of most other stars and cosmic objects, the field strengths are much lower and the
spectral lines are broadened rather than actually split by the Zeeman effect. However, weak
fields can still be studied by measuring the polarization of the line wings – the parts of a
spectral line well away from the central peak. Zeeman splitting is observed in the case of
some magnetic variables which are associated with intense magnetic fields.
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
SPECTROSCOPIC TIMELINE
1933 C.E. Gleeton and N.H. Williams perform first microwave absorption experiments
1935 Zablonski publishes energy level diagram for molecular luminescence
1938 H.M. Randall and F.A. Firestone use far IR for rotation spectroscopy
1940 Beckman Company begins marketing DU Quartz Spectrophotometer
1945 Felix Block and E.M. Purcell see emission and absorption, respectively, when
observing nuclear magnetic resonance
1949 W.D. Knight observes NMR chemical shifts
1949 Peter Fellgett performs Fourier transform of an interferrogram
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1949 John White and Max Listen develop double beam optical null IR spectrometer
1955 Alan Walsh develops atomic absorption spectroscopy
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LASERS OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
SPECTROSCOPIC TIMELINE
1958 C. Townes, A.L. Schalow, and T.H. Maiman develop laser
1961 B.V. L'vov develops carbon rod furnace
1962 F.J. McClung and R.W. Hellwarth develop pulsed laser
1963 C. Th. J. Alkemade shows that fluorescence of metals can be stimulated in a flame
1964 J.D. Winefordner and T.J. Vickers develop atomic fluorescence spectroscopy
1964 Stanley Greenfield performs first ICP-AES
1966 P.P. Sorokin and J.R. Lankard develop dye laser
1968 R. Mavrodineau and R.C. Hughes publish several optical systems for multielement AA
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1979 C.G. Enke and R.A. Yost develop triple quadrupole for MS-MS
1981 W. Slavin, D.C. Manning, and G.R. Carnick develop Stabilized Temperature Platform
Furnace
1983 S.B. Smith & G.M. Hieftje introduce pulsed hollow cathode background correction
PLASMAS
method for AA
OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
Spectral series
LASERS
The most important discovery in regularity of line spectrum of atoms was made by J.
Balmer (Swiss) in 1885. He discovered the line frequencies observed in visible range
of hydrogen atom
(λ = 656 nm, 486 nm, 434 nm and 410 nm)
are arranged by empiric formula:
1 1
ν ab R 2 2
2 n
where νab is frequency of emission or absorption line, n = 3, 4 or 5. R is a constant
later called Rydberg’s constant. When the value of n increases the lines become
more frequent and go to a limit value of 365 nm (end of series).
SPECTROSCOPY
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OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
Spectral series
LASERS
1
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1
ν ab R 2 2
1 n
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OSPL Department – BUCHAREST UNIVERSITY OPTICS
Spectral series
LASERS
n 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
Wavelength (nm) 1874.5 1281.4 1093.5 1004.6 954.3 922.6 901.2 886.0 874.8 866.2 820.1
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due to a electron falling into the third from the fourth and fifth stable
orbits in hydrogen atom.
1 Annalen der Physik, 27, 537, 1908
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A CLASSICAL VIEW OF
RADIATION
• James Clerk Maxwell is generally regarded as the greatest theoretical
physicist of the 19th century. Born in Edinburgh to a well-known Scottish family,
he entered the University of Edinburgh at age 15, around the time that he
discovered an original method for drawing a perfect oval. Maxwell was appointed
to his first professorship in 1856 at Aberdeen. This was the beginning of a career
during which he would develop the electromagnetic theory of light and
explanations of the nature of Saturn's rings, and contribute to the kinetic theory of
gases.
• Maxwell's development of the electromagnetic theory of light took many years
and began with the paper "On Faraday's Lines of Force," in which Maxwell
expanded upon Faraday's theory that the electric and magnetic effects result from
force fields surrounding conductors and magnets. His next publication, "On
Physical Lines of Force," includes a series of papers explaining the known effects
and the nature of electromagnetism.
• Maxwell's other important contributions to theoretical physics were made in the
area of the kinetic theory of gases. Here, he furthered the work of Rudolf Clausius,
who in 1858 had shown that a gas must consist of molecules in constant motion
colliding with one another and with the walls of the container. This resulted in
Maxwell's distribution of molecular speeds in addition to important applications of
the theory of viscosity, conduction of heat, and diffusion of gases.
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• Maxwell's successful interpretation of Faraday's concept of the electromagnetic
field resulted in the field equation bearing Maxwell's name. Formidable
mathematical ability combined with great insight enabled Maxwell to lead the way
in the study of the two most important areas of physics at his time. Maxwell died of
cancer before he was 50.
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Planck later recalled why he persisted with physics: "The outside world
is something independent from man, something absolute, and the
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quest for the laws which apply to this absolute appeared to me as
the most sublime scientific pursuit in life."
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Blackbody radiation
While a student at Berlin from 1877 to 1878, Planck had been taught by Gustav Kirchhoff
who studied the spectra of light given off by hot substances. In 1859, Kirchhoff proved an
important theorem about ideal objects that he called blackbodies. A blackbody is something
that soaks up every scrap of energy that falls upon it and reflects nothing – hence its
name. It's a slightly confusing name, however, because a blackbody isn't just a perfect
absorber: it's a perfect emitter as well. In one form or another, a blackbody gives back out
every bit of energy that it takes in. If it's hot enough to give off visible light then it won't be
black at all. It might glow red, orange, or even white. Stars, for example, despite the obvious
fact that they're not black (unless they're black holes!), act very nearly as blackbodies; so,
too, do furnaces and kilns because of their small openings that allow radiation to escape only
after it's been absorbed and reemitted countless times by the interior walls. Kirchhoff proved
that the amount of energy a blackbody radiates from each square centimeter of its surface
hinges on just two factors: the frequency of the radiation and the temperature of the
blackbody. He challenged other physicists to figure out the exact nature of this dependency:
What formula accurately tells how much energy a blackbody emits at a given temperature
and frequency?
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Planck's formula
Planck knew how the blackbody formula, first sought by Kirchhoff four decades
earlier, had to look mathematically at the high-frequency end of the spectrum
given that Wien's law seemed to work well in this region. And he knew, from the
experimental results, how a blackbody was supposed to behave in the low-
frequency regime. So, he took the step of putting these relationships together in
the simplest possible way. Between tea and supper, Planck had the formula in
his hands that told how the energy of blackbody radiation is related to
frequency. He announced his formula to the world at a meeting of the German
Physical Society on October 19, 1900.
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where
• is the amount of energy per unit surface per unit time per unit solid
angle emitted in the frequency range between ν and ν+dν;
• is the temperature of the black body;
• is Planck's constant;
• is the speed of light; and
• is Boltzmann's constant.
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Energy quanta
To put a value on molecular disorder, Planck had to be able to add up the number of ways
a given amount of energy can be spread among a set of blackbody
oscillators; and it was at this juncture that he had his great insight. He brought in the
idea of what he called energy elements – little snippets of energy into which the total
energy of the blackbody had to be divided in order to make the formulation work. By late
1900, Planck had built his new radiation law from the ground up, having made the
extraordinary assumption that energy comes in tiny, indivisible lumps. In the paper he
wrote, presented to the German Physical Society on December 14, he talked about energy
"as made up of a completely determinate number of finite parts" and introduced a
new constant of nature, h, with the fantastically small value of about 6.6 × 10-27 erg
second. This constant, now known as Planck's constant, connects the size of a
particular energy element to the frequency of the oscillators associated with that
element.
For the first time, someone had hinted that energy isn't continuous. It can't, as every
scientist had blithely assumed up to that point, be traded in arbitrarily small amounts.
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Energy comes in indivisible bits. Planck had shown that energy, like matter, can't be
chopped up indefinitely. (The irony, of course, is that Planck still doubted the existence
of atoms!) It's always transacted in tiny parcels, or quanta. And so Planck began the
transformation of our view of nature and the birth of quantum theory.
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the electric field. This amplitude is a function of the frequency of the driving electric field. The
frequency that will maximize the amplitude is the resonant frequency.
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The plum pudding model of the atom was proposed by J. J. Thomson, the
discoverer of the electron in 1897. In this model, the atom is composed of
electrons, surrounded by a soup of positive charge to balance the electron's
negative charge, like plums surrounded by pudding. The electrons were thought
to be positioned throughout the atom, but with many electron structures possible,
particularly rotating rings. Instead of a soup, the atom was also sometimes said
to have had a cloud of positive charge. In Thomson's model, electrons were free
to rotate in rings which were further stabilized by interactions between the
electrons, and spectra were to be accounted for by energy differences of different
ring orbits. Thomson attempted to make his model account for some of the major
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spectral lines known for some elements, but was not notably successful at this.
(On the Structure of the Atom: an Investigation of the Stability and Periods of Oscillation of a number of
Corpuscles arranged at equal intervals around the Circumference of a Circle; with Application of the Results
to the Theory of Atomic Structure), published in the Philosophical Magazine
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the Rutherford model did not attribute any
structure to the orbits of the electrons.
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place in distinctly separated emissions, the amount of energy
radiated out from an atomic vibrator of frequency n in a single
emission being equal to thn, where t is an entire number, and h is a
universal constant.
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2
m Ze 1 2
En 2 2
2 4 0 n
rn
4 0 2
n 2
2
Ze m
2
m e 2
1 1
n ab
3
2 2
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4 4 0 na nb
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2
~ m e 2
R
3
109737 cm 1
4 4 0
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”We see that this expression accounts for the law connecting the
lines in the spectrum of hydrogen. If we put t2 2 and let t1 vary, we get
the ordinary Balmer series. If we put t2 = 3, we get the series in the
ultrared observed by Paschen and previously suspected by Ritz. If we
put t2 = 1 and t2 = 4, 5 we get series respectively in the extreme
ultraviolet and the extreme ultrared, which are not observed, but
the existence of which may be expected.
The agreement in question is quantitative as well as qualitative.”
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Introduction to Stellar Spectra
LASERS
Study the spectrum of Vega, which shows the intensity of the light as a function of the
wavelength.
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Introduction to Stellar Spectra
LASERS
Study the spectrum of Star BD, which shows the intensity of the light as a function of the
wavelength.
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L l
it's projection along a
direction of a magnetic
field:
Lz m
has many values:
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m l, l 1, l 2,..., l 1, l
It is called the magnetic quantum number because the application
of an external magnetic field causes a splitting of spectral lines
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The movement of the electron around the nucleus and around axis is
characterized by 4 quantum numbers:
- n, principal quantum number;
- l, orbital quantum number;
- m, magnetic quantum number;
- s, spin quantum number.
n denotes the radial wave function and determines the energy of quantum
state.
l = 0, 1, 2, 3,...., n-1
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l = 0 circular orbits
l = 1 elliptical orbits
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-K 1 0 0 1s
0 0
2 2s
2 1 1 2p+1
2 0 2p0
1 px, py, pz
2 1 -1 2p-1
3 0 0 3s
3 1 1 3p+1
3 0 3p0
px, py, pz
1
3 1 -1 3p-1
3 2 2 3d+2
3 2 1 3d+1 |
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3 0 3d0
2
3 2 -1 3d-1 |
3 2 -2 3d-2
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Probability densities for the electron at different quantum numbers
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n=1
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n=2, l=0
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n=2, l=1
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n=3, l=0
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n=3, l=1
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n=3, l=2
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n=4, l=0
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n=4, l=2
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n=4, l=3
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Hydrogen Atom
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Normal Zeeman
effect (Lorentz triplet)
in strong magnetic
field
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field, visible transversal and longitudinal
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The Sodium Doublet
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where mB is the Bohr magneton and g is the electron spin
g-factor with value very close to 2. This gives an estimate
of the internal magnetic field needed to produce the
observed splitting:
m gB = (5.79 x 10-5 eV/T)2B = 0.0021 eV
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momentum of an electron can be considered to be conserved and j is said to be
a "good quantum number". This quantum number is used to characterize the
splitting of atomic energy levels, such as the spin-orbit splitting which leads to
the sodium doublet.
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Spin-Orbit Interaction
The energy levels of atomic electrons are affected by the interaction
between the electron spin magnetic moment and the orbital angular
momentum of the electron. It can be visualized as a magnetic field
caused by the electron's orbital motion interacting with the spin
magnetic moment. This effective magnetic field can be expressed in
terms of the electron orbital angular momentum. The interaction
energy is that of a magnetic dipole in a magnetic field and takes the
form
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Hydrogen Fine Structure
LASERS
When the spectral lines of the hydrogen spectrum are examined at very high resolution, they are found to be
closely-spaced doublets. This splitting is called fine structure and was one of the first experimental evidences
for electron spin.
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use the reduced mass, you get 656.47 nm for
hydrogen and 656.29 nm for deuterium. The
difference between the hydrogen and
deuterium lines is about 0.2
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Multi-electron Atoms
Helium
wavelengths (nm)
438.793 w
443.755 w
447.148 s
471.314 m
492.193 m
501.567 s
504.774 w
587.562 s
667.815 m
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s=strong,
m=med,
w=weak
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Term Symbols
The heirarchy of labels for the electrons of multi-electron
atoms is configuration, term, level, and state.
The term uses the multiplicity 2S + 1, total orbital angular
momentum L, and total angular momentum J.
It assumes that:
- all the spins combine to produce S,
- all the orbital angular momenta couple to produce L,
- then the spin and orbital terms combine to produce a
total angular momentum J (Russel-Saunders coupling).
The angular momentum symbol follows the spectroscopic
notation scheme.
Different terms will in general have different energies, and
the order of those energies is usually that given by Hund's
Rules, although there are exceptions. The different terms
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for a given configuration are obtained by forming the
different combinations of angular momenta for the electrons
outside closed shells, making sure the Pauli Exclusion
Principle is obeyed.
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s = ½ , ↑ sau ↓ =>
S = 0, ↑↓ => spin multiplicity 2S+1=1, singlet state
or
S = 1, ↑↑ => spin multiplicity 2S+1=3, triplet state
One-electron atom has only singlet states.
2e atom has only singlet & triplet states.
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Hund's Rules
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Hund's rules assume combination
to form S and L, or imply L-S
(Russell-Saunders) coupling.
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l 1
Allowed Transitions m 0,1
j 0,1
S 0
Laporte rule: different parity,
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s↔p, p↔d
Notes:
These are the selection rules for an electric dipole transition.
All could be relaxed.
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Explanation: Shown above are all the visible colors of the Sun. The above spectrum was
created at the McMath-Pierce Solar Observatory and shows, first off, that although our
yellow-appearing Sun emits light of nearly every color, it does indeed appear brightest in
yellow-green light. The dark patches in the above spectrum arise from gas at or above the
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Sun's surface absorbing sunlight emitted below. Since different types of gas absorb
different colors of light, it is possible to determine what gasses compose the Sun.
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