UDC 542.43 In the deactivation of laser states in gas-discharge lasers, a significant rule is played by nonradiative transitions between energy levels in inelastic collisions between atoms of the active material and also collisions with impurity atoms. Such transitions occur both within a single multiplet and between states with different multiplicity, under the condition that the energy difference between the initial and final states be no more than a few kT. Further increase in the energy difference leads to a sharp decrease in energy-transmission cross section. If the energy gap is small, however, the working-gas pressure is a few torr, the probability of nonradiative transitions between fine-structure components of the atoms may be of the same order as the probability of optically resolved transitions. This leads to additional redistribution of the excitation between the energy states, which considerably influences the operating conditions of gas-discharge lasers. Inelastic processes begin to play a special role in collisions of strongly excited atomic particles [i], since in this case there is an increase not only in the density of energy states but also in the purely geometric cross section of the atoms participating in the collisions (Oam ~ n2). The cross section of nonradiative transition between the energy levels of the atom increases here. The need for detailed study of the process of nonradiative excitation transmission is also a consequence of the presence of considerable difficulties in the theory of atomic collisions in considering the deviations from LS coupling, for which there exists an experimentally confirmed conservation rule for the total spin moment of the colliding particles (the Wigner rule). The inadequacy of experimental data on the transmission of excitation between energy states described by other forms of interaction does not permit an unambiguous conclusion regarding the presence of definite transition conditions for the case of jZ and jj coupling. The measurable cross sections of nonradiative transitions offer the possibility of estimating the exchange-interaction potential of the colliding particles and finding the distance between atoms at which inelastic processes with transmission of excitation occur. In a theoretical consideration of the transitions between fine-structure components, this allows the wave functions of the initial and final states of the quasimolecules constituted by the colliding atoms to be correctly chosen and also allows all types of interaction to be taken into account in the Hamiltonian of the given system. The absence of a sufficient amount of experimental data on the inelastic-transi tion cross section considerably retards the development of theoretical research in this field. The process of nonradiative excitation transmission may occur in collisions between atoms of the same or different kinds. Therefore in investigating theactive medium of a gasdischarge laser (GDL) consisting of a mixture of gases, it is necessary to distinguish between the possible channels of particle interaction. In the present work, experimental results are given on the excitation transmission between the 2pS3p levels of neon in collisions of neon and helium atoms in gas-discharge plasmaz Ne*(2pi)+He(0) ~-Ne*(2p~)q-He(0) , where Ne* (2pi,k) are the initial (i) and final (k) excited states of the neon atom; He(0) is a helium atom in the ground state; AEik is the energy distance between the levels i and k. This process plays the main role in the nonradiative transmission of excitation between levels of the group 2pS3p in inelastic collisions of atomic particles, since the concentration of helium atoms in the plasma is higher than that of neon atoms.
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