Abstract

The neon spectrum in the ultraviolet between 2500A and 4000A from a canal-ray tube was examined for Doppler effects. Potentials up to 24,000 volts were applied to excite the discharge. Doppler effects were found to be present among the stronger lines in the first and second spark spectra of neon and, with only two exceptions, were absent from the arc spectrum lines. About fifty strong and faint lines showing Doppler effects were observed. The canal-ray stream consists of rapidly moving neon atoms which radiate only when in the ionized state. Neon behaves similarly to argon at high voltages and differs from most gases in that the radiation from the canal rays is almost entirely from atoms in the ionized state.

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