Sensitive detection of metastable NO and \ce{N2} by reactive collisions with laser-excited Li
Jiwen Guan, Tobias Sixt, Katrin Dulitz, Frank Stienkemeier

TL;DR
This study demonstrates a sensitive method to detect metastable nitric oxide and nitrogen molecules through reactive collisions with laser-excited lithium, enabling detailed analysis of their densities and collision dynamics.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel reactive collision-based detection technique for metastable molecules, allowing quantification and state-specific studies of NO and N2 in a supersonic beam.
Findings
Detected NO(a$^4\Pi_i$) molecules at densities around 600 per cm$^3$.
Measured metastable N2 molecule densities of approximately 6×10$^4$ per cm$^3$.
Observed a 21-fold difference in ion yields between different lithium electronic states.
Abstract
In a proof-of-principle experiment, we demonstrate that metastable nitric oxide molecules, NO(a), generated inside a pulsed, supersonic beam, can be detected by reactive gas-phase collisions with electronically excited Li atoms in the P state. Since the internal energy of NO(a, ) is lower than the ionization potential of Li in the S electronic ground state, we observe that the product ion yield arising from autoionizing NO(a)+Li(S) collisions is a factor of 21 lower than the ion yield from NO(a)+Li(P) collisions. We also compare our findings with measurements of relative rates for collisions of metastable \ce{N2}+Li(S) and metastable \ce{N2}+Li(P) reactive collisions. Using this detection method, we infer densities of NO(a) molecules/cm…
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