Abstract

One characteristic normally used to distinguish inhomogeneous broadening from homogeneous broadening is the saturation behavior occurring when irradiation takes place at line center. The usual behavior found is that the absorption coefficient decreases as a negative power of 1 + I/Isat; a power of −1 indicates homogeneous broadening and a power of −½ denotes inhomogeneous broadening. It is shown here that, in the rate equation limit, this behavior is followed in most cases even though the homogeneous and inhomogeneous absorption profiles can have any line shape. The homogeneous line shape, in particular, need not be Lorentzian; its line center saturation behavior will be the same as that of a Lorentzian, however. If the inhomogeneous broadening is due to a distribution of atomic center frequencies, in the inhomogeneous limit the usual line center saturation behavior will be found no matter what the combination of homogeneous and inhomogeneous line shapes. However, if the broadening is inhomogeneous because of a distribution, among the individual atoms, in any property of the absorption profile other than center frequency (for example, the homogeneous linewidth), the saturation properties are not as simple, and in fact the inhomogeneous limit may not even exist.

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