Abstract
Outside a surface of sufficiently low work function, incident 10-eV He+ ions convert to excited atoms which, in turn, eject electrons in the process of Auger deexcitation (Penning ionization). The electron spectroscopy thus demonstrated for He+ incident on Ni(100) with adsorbed K+ is the essential equivalent of that employing incident metastable atoms. Energy and wave-function considerations governing the partition between neutralization and deexcitation processes are discussed and evidence of the surface sensitivity of these processes is presented.