Abstract

The importance of the nuclear spins in the analysis of alkali spin-exchange experiments employing optical pumping by circularly polarized light and performed in low magnetic fields is demonstrated. Since the exchange interaction is an electronic process, the spin-exchange cross section is expected to be essentially independent of the nuclear spins. However, the hyperfine coupling is sufficient to make the expressions for the signals depend upon the nuclear spins. Failure to include the nuclear-spin effects in the analysis can lead to errors as large as several hundred percent in the deduced cross sections. The signal for general nuclear spin is found for the Franzen-type transient experiment and for the Dehmelt-type steady-state experiment in the limit of low light intensity. The results are quite sensitive to the process assumed for the relaxation of the ground-state populations. The solutions are given for a general process in which randomly oriented disorientation fields interact with the spins of the alkali atom only through the electron spin. The steady-state-signal expression includes the effects of self spin exchange and partial disorientation in the excited state. Only the diagonal elements of the density matrix are included.

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