You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
Contents:Two-Color Double Resonance Spectroscopy For the Study of High Excited States of Molecules (M Ito & M Fujii)Resonantly Enhanced Multiphoton Ionization — Photoelectron Spectroscopy as a Probe of Molecular Photophysics and Photochemistry (S Pratt, P Dehmer & J Dehmer)Progress in Resonance Enhanced Multiphoton Ionization Spectroscopy of Transient Free Radicals (J Hudgens)Time-Resolved Resonance Raman Spectroscopy: Intense Electromagnetic Field Effects, and Photoelectrochemical Reactions on Semiconductor Crystallite Surfaces (L Brus) Readership: Atomic physicists, chemists and materials scientists.
First published in 1987. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
None
Since the first stimulated emission pumping (SEP) experiments more than a decade ago, this technique has proven powerful for studying vibrationally excited molecules. SEP is now widely used by increasing numbers of research groups to investigate fundamental problems in spectroscopy, intramolecular dynamics, intermolecular interactions, and even reactions. SEP provides rotationally pre-selected spectra of vibrationally highly excited molecules undergoing large amplitude motions. A unique feature of SEP is the ability to access systematically a wide variety of extreme excitations localized in various parts of a molecule, and to prepare populations in specific, high vibrational levels. SEP has made it possible to ask and answer specific questions about intramolecular vibrational redistribution and the role of vibrational excitation in chemical reactions.
This publication is the Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Research Workshop (ARW) on the Dynamics of Polyatomic Van der Waals Molecules held at the Chateau de Bonas, Castera-Verduzan, France, from August 21 through August 26, 1989. Van der Waals complexes provide important model problems for understanding energy transfer and dissipation. These processes can be described in great detail for Van der Waals complexes, and the insight gained from such studies can be applied to more complicated chemical problems that are not amenable to detailed study. The workshop concentrated on the current questions and future prospects for extend ing our highly detailed knowledge of triatomic Van der Waals mole...