DocumentCode :
1102969
Title :
Difficulties associated with stimulated emission in a bismuth - Neon discharge
Author :
Peard, Kenneth A. ; Tobin, Roderick C.
Author_Institution :
Footscray Institute of Technology, Footscray and Monash University, Clayton; Victoria, Austrailia
Volume :
20
Issue :
7
fYear :
1984
fDate :
7/1/1984 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
765
Lastpage :
771
Abstract :
The population of the metastable 6p^{3} 2 D_{3/2}^{0} bismuth level has been determined by time-resolved absorption spectroscopy at times in the range 1-10 \\mu s after the start of the discharge in a bismuth vaporneon mixture, for a neon pressure of 13 mbar and a specific discharge energy of 1 mJ . cm-3. An exponential decay of the population is observed and lifetimes of 3.0, 4.5, and 5.3 μs are obtained at temperatures of 830, 790, and 755°C, respectively. Measurements of the nine strongest fluorescent transitions to the metastable level confirm that a population of the order of 1013cm-3is established in the early stage of the discharge and exceeds by three orders of magnitude the peak population of the bismuth resonance level 6p^{2} 7s^{4}P_{1/2} . It is concluded that the absence of laser emission at 472.2 nm in the system studied is due to excessive population of the metastable level 6p^{3} 2 D_{3/2}^{0} during the early stage of the discharge. It is proposed that this high population arises from the dissociation of Bi2dimers by electron impact and that the loss of electron energy to dissociation and to excitation of the vibrational and rotational levels of the dimers is responsible for the very low population achieved in the 6p^{2} 7s 4 p_{1/2} level.
Keywords :
Gas lasers; Absorption; Atomic beams; Bismuth; Electron tubes; Gas lasers; Laser excitation; Laser transitions; Metastasis; Resonance; Stimulated emission;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Quantum Electronics, IEEE Journal of
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9197
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JQE.1984.1072473
Filename :
1072473
Link To Document :
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