Polarization ratio velocity dependence dips: A collision frame model relating spectroscopic observables to the differential cross section
- 1 October 1991
- journal article
- Published by AIP Publishing in The Journal of Chemical Physics
- Vol. 95 (7) , 4958-4965
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.461712
Abstract
We present a model that accounts for the observation described in the first paper of this series (I) of a dip in the polarization ratio profile observed in certain rotationally inelastic processes as a narrow line laser is tuned across the Doppler profile. The model is based on conservation of the projection of j along the kinematic apse [Khare, Kouri, and Hoffmann, J. Chem. Phys. 74, 2275 (1981)], a consequence of rotational angular momentum transfer in the impulsive limit. As an illustration, we present calculations of lab frame observations expected for several examples of scattering behavior in the collision frame and conclude that information on the state-to-state differential scattering cross section is contained in the polarization profile. We display a number of figures that make explicit the relationship between the relative momentum and rotational angular momentum vectors in the experiment and illustrate the ‘‘stereochemical dynamics’’ responsible for the polarization dip.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Variation of the polarization ratio for rotationally inelastic collisions with laser selected velocityThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1991
- Velocity-Selective Double Resonance: A Novel Technique for Determining Differential Scattering Cross SectionsPhysical Review Letters, 1988
- Rotational Energy Transfer: Polarization and ScalingAnnual Review of Physical Chemistry, 1986
- M-preserving propensities for rotationally inelastic NH3-He collisions. In the kinematic apse frameChemical Physics, 1985
- Complete determination of the state multipoles of rotationally resolved polarized fluorescence using a single experimental geometryThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1984
- Experimental determination of the mj distribution in inelastic scattering of Na2 by HeChemical Physics Letters, 1983
- On a j z-preserving propensity in molecular collisions. II. Close-coupling study of state-to-state differential cross sectionsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1982
- On j z-preserving propensities in molecular collisions. I. Quantal coupled states and classical impulsive approximationsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1981
- Propensity for preserving polarization in rotationally inelastic molecular collisionsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1981
- Deconvolution of thermal averaging in scattering experiments using integral transform methodsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1978