Abstract

Polarization phenomena are present in every radiative transition, whether it is of atomic or nuclear origin. Nuclear resonant scattering of synchrotron radiation is an ideal technique for their study because (a) the probing radiation is in a well characterized polarization state, in most cases linear, (b) the scattered radiation can be efficiently analyzed with polarization filters, and (c) synchrotron pulses are very short compared to the lifetime of a nuclear resonance, resulting in a clean signal. In the following article we describe experimental and theoretical studies of the 14.4 keV Mossbauer resonance of 57Fe and its transitions with linear and circular polarization. After introducing the required instrumentation a formalism to calculate time dependent polarization phenomena is derived. With the help of different scattering geometries we illustrate various aspects, such as polarization mixing and selective excitation of subsets of the resonance. Perhaps the most fascinating example is the Faraday geometry where the E-vector rotates several 360ο turns during the lifetime of the resonant scattering. A comparison of this phenomenon with the optical Faraday effect is given. New powerful synchrotron radiation sources will enable researchers to exploit polarization phenomena in nuclear resonant scattering to detect subtle changes in physically and chemically relevant systems.

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