Abstract

Experiments are described in which the populations of metastable levels in ionizing argon are measured through spatially resolved hook interferometry. The results are compared with the present model for shock-induced ionization and a recently proposed mechanism to explain observed flow instabilities. It is found that the experimental measurements support the presently accepted model, which states that electron–atom collisions play the dominant role in the excitation process, but contradicts recent proposals which predict a rapid build-up of anomalously high metastable populations through atom–atom collisions.

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