RESUMO
Several types of experiments showed the existence of negative methane ions CH_{4}^{-} over a period of 50 years but the nature of this elusive species remains unknown. A benchmark study has shown that the experimentally observed species cannot be described by the attachment of an electron in the doublet ground state of CH_{4}^{-}. Here we find CH_{4}^{-} as being a metastable species in its lowest quartet spin state, a CH_{2}^{-}:H_{2} exciplex with three open shells lying ca. 10 eV above the methane singlet ground state but slightly below the dissociation fragments. The formation of charged high-spin exciplexes is a novel mechanism to explain small molecular anions with implications in a plethora of basic and applied research fields.
RESUMO
Faraday polarization rotators are commonly used in laser experiments. Most Faraday materials have a nonnegligible absorption, which is a limiting factor for high power laser optical isolators or for intracavity optical diodes. By using a stronger magnetic field and a shorter length of Faraday material, one can obtain the same polarization rotation and a reduced absorption. In this paper, we describe two permanent magnet arrangements that are easy to build and produce magnetic fields up to 1.7 T, substantially more than commonly used. The field homogeneity is largely sufficient for a 30 dB isolation ratio. We finally discuss the prospects for producing even larger fields with permanent magnets.
RESUMO
The light reflected by an uncoated Fabry-Perot etalon presents dark rings which give a very sensitive measurement of the variations of the return optical path in the etalon. By measuring the diameters of these rings as a function of the etalon temperature T, we get a sensitive measurement of the derivative dn/dT of the index of refraction n. We have made this experiment with a fused silica etalon and we have achieved a 2% relative uncertainty on dn/dT, comparable to the uncertainty of the best experiments.