Abstract
In many experiments Lyman‐α radiation has been detected by means of the iodine‐vapor‐filled ultraviolet photon counter of Brackmann, Fite, and Hagen in combination with a LiF–O2 filter. In the case of electrons incident on molecular hydrogen, Fite and Brackmann have used the detector for determination of the cross section for ``countable ultraviolet radiation'' (cuv) being chiefly composed of Lyman‐α radiation and an unknown fraction of molecular radiation. In the present investigation the transmission properties of the LiF–O2 filter are investigated. At 100 eV impact energy it is found that 26% of the transmitted radiation is molecular radiation. Considering this fraction, it is possible to evaluate the cross sections for Lyman‐α radiation from Fite and Brackmann's cuv cross sections. These cross sections agree very well (within about 6%) with those of de Heer and Carrière, obtained by a different procedure.