Absolute energies and emission line shapes of the L x-ray transitions of lanthanide metals
Joseph W. Fowler (1, 2), Galen C. O'Neil (2), Bradley K. Alpert, (2), Douglas A. Bennett (2), Ed V. Denison (2), W. B. Doriese (2), Gene C., Hilton (2), Lawrence T. Hudson (2), Young-Il Joe (1, 2), Kelsey M. Morgan, (1, 2), Daniel R. Schmidt (2), Daniel S. Swetz (2)

TL;DR
This study employs advanced cryogenic microcalorimeters to precisely measure L x-ray emission lines of lanthanide metals, significantly improving energy accuracy and expanding reference data for these elements.
Contribution
The paper provides highly accurate L x-ray line profiles and energies for lanthanides, with improved calibration and novel measurement techniques compared to prior work.
Findings
97 emission line profiles measured as Voigt sums
Median energy uncertainty reduced to 0.24 eV
Six lines measured for the first time in reference data
Abstract
We use an array of transition-edge sensors, cryogenic microcalorimeters with 4 eV energy resolution, to measure L x-ray emission-line profiles of four elements of the lanthanide series: praseodymium, neodymium, terbium, and holmium. The spectrometer also surveys numerous x-ray standards in order to establish an absolute-energy calibration traceable to the International System of Units for the energy range 4 keV to 10 keV. The new results include emission line profiles for 97 lines, each expressed as a sum of one or more Voigt functions; improved absolute energy uncertainty on 71 of these lines relative to existing reference data; a median uncertainty on the peak energy of 0.24 eV, four to ten times better than the median of prior work; and 6 lines that lack any measured values in existing reference tables. The 97 lines comprise nearly all of the most intense L lines from these elements…
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