15min:
ROTATIONAL HANDLES FOR ELECTRONIC SPECTROSCOPY: MILLIMETER-WAVE DETECTION TECHNIQUES FOR MILLIMETER-WAVE--OPTICAL DOUBLE RESONANCE IN COMPLEX ENVIRONMENTS.

ADAM H. STEEVES, HANS A. BECHTEL, STEVEN L. COY AND ROBERT W. FIELD, Department of Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139.

We report the application of two millimeter-wave detected millimeter-wave--optical double resonance techniques to the study of electronically excited states of CS produced in a pulsed discharge supersonic expansion. In the first technique, millimeter-wave detected millimeter-wave--optical double resonance (mmD-mmODR), the double resonance signal is obtained by monitoring the change in the absorption of resonant millimeter-wave radiation induced by a tunable ultraviolet laser pulse. In the second technique, millimeter-wave polarization-detected millimeter-wave--optical double resonance (mmP-mmODR), polarization-rotation of the resonant millimeter-wave field is used to detect the spatial anisotropy created by the optical resonance. The enhancement in sensitivity achieved by the polarization-labeling technique is used to detect spin-forbidden electronic transitions in CS. We also demonstrate the applicability of these techniques to recording pure rotational spectra of excited electronic states with lifetime-limited resolution.