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Savannah River VM--Intellect application support documentation (open access)

Savannah River VM--Intellect application support documentation

This document details the underlying support programming and structures that support the INTELLECT and KBMS products at the Savannah River Facility. The target audience for this document includes INTELLECT System Administrators, INTELLECT programmers and developers, and VM Systems Programmers.
Date: September 23, 1988
Creator: Carter, L. S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Savannah River VM--Intellect application support documentation (open access)

Savannah River VM--Intellect application support documentation

This document details the underlying support programming and structures that support the INTELLECT and KBMS products at the Savannah River Facility. The target audience for this document includes INTELLECT System Administrators, INTELLECT programmers and developers, and VM Systems Programmers.
Date: September 23, 1988
Creator: Carter, L. S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ion dip spectroscopy of cold molecules and ions. Progress report (open access)

Ion dip spectroscopy of cold molecules and ions. Progress report

During the past year, the main emphasis in this research program has been on multiphoton ionization spectroscopy of aromatic clusters. This is being pursued in addition to continuing work in areas of ion dip spectroscopy and ion fragmentation spectroscopy. The program has the overall objective of developing improved ultrasensitive molecular detection methods based on multiphoton laser spectroscopy. Photoionization techniques are employed due to their extreme sensitivity combined with mass selectivity. The combination of these two features has led to the current capability to study molecular clusters of specific sizes with high spectral resolution. Clusters are formed in abundance in a supersonic expansion, where they are excited and ionized by an ultraviolet laser beam. The studies reported here are principally based on simple resonant excitation of clusters, followed by one-photon ionization. For the naphthalene clusters, a single laser wavelength suffices for both excitation steps. Additional investigations have been carried out to measure excited state cluster ionization spectra and cluster ion fragmentation spectra. Results from these measurements are not yet sufficiently advanced to report in detail, however the preliminary data support the importance of recently proposed new fundamental ionization mechanisms in clusters. This brief report summarizes results described in more detail in …
Date: August 23, 1988
Creator: Wessel, J.E.
System: The UNT Digital Library