Low-frequency, self-sustained oscillations in inductively coupled plasmas used for optical pumping

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Abstract

We have investigated very low frequency, on the order of one hertz, self-pulsing in alkali-metal inductively-coupled plasmas (i.e., rf-discharge lamps). This self-pulsing has the potential to significantly vary signal-to-noise ratios and (via the ac-Stark shift) resonant frequencies in optically pumped atomic clocks and magnetometers (e.g., the atomic clocks now flying on GPS and Galileo global navigation system satellites). The phenomenon arises from a nonlinear interaction between the atomic physics of radiation trapping and the plasma's electrical nature. To explain the effect, we have developed an evaporation/condensation theory (EC theory) of the self-pulsing phenomenon.

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Coffer, J., Encalada, N., Huang, M., & Camparo, J. (2014). Low-frequency, self-sustained oscillations in inductively coupled plasmas used for optical pumping. Journal of Applied Physics, 116(16). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4899199

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