Metastable Hydrogen Molecules
- 1 November 1960
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review B
- Vol. 120 (3), 848-853
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrev.120.848
Abstract
The existence of a metastable electronic state of has been established by means of the molecular beam magnetic resonance technique. Observations have been made of the radio-frequency Zeeman spectrum of natural and para-hydrogen. At a magnetic field of about 5 gauss the strongest line corresponds to a value of 0.83. The appearance potential for this line is 11.9±0.25 ev. Observation of the quadratic Zeeman effect made it possible to estimate the fine structure of the level of para-hydrogen. The observed intervals are: Mc/sec, Mc/sec. This represents the first complete resolution of the fine structure of a rotational level of . Knowledge of the electronic structure of , agreement of the appearance potential with spectroscopic data, agreement of the fine structure with partially resolved optical spectra, and good agreement of the Zeeman spectra with theory lead to the conclusion that the metastable state must be , .
Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hyperfine Structure of theState ofand. Properties of Metastable States of MercuryPhysical Review B, 1960
- Correlated Orbitals for the Ground State of the Hydrogen MoleculeReviews of Modern Physics, 1960
- The molecular spectrum of hydrogen and its isotopesJournal of Molecular Spectroscopy, 1958
- Magnetic Moment of Helium in ItsMetastable StatePhysical Review B, 1958
- Lifetime Measurements of Metastable States in Molecular NitrogenThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1957
- Fine Structure of the Hydrogen Atom. Part IIPhysical Review B, 1951
- Fine Structure of the Hydrogen Atom. Part IPhysical Review B, 1950
- Continuous Spectra ofandPhysical Review B, 1939
- On the Determination of Molecular Potential Curves from Spectroscopic DataPhysical Review B, 1938
- Wave Functions and Potential Curves for Excited H2The Journal of Chemical Physics, 1938