DURING MY FIRST YEAR as a student at the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris, our professor, Eugene Bloch, introduced us to quantum physics, which was seldom taught in France at that time. Like him, I was from Alsace and spoke German. He strongly advised me to read Arnold Sommerfeld's excellent book Atombau und Spektrallinien. When reading this book, I was particularly interested in the application of the principle of conservation of angular momentum in interactions between electromagnetic radiation and matter—an application that guided A. Rubinowicz to the interpretation of the selection rules for the angular momentum quantum number and for polarization in the Zeeman effect. On the assumption of light quanta, this principle led to attributing an angular momentum to the photons or according to whether the light was circularly polarized to the right or to the left natural light being a mixture of the two types of photon.
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September 1967
September 01 1967
Optical methods for the study of radio‐frequency resonances
The double resonance method and optical pumping technique have led to advances in the study of nuclear spins and magnetic moments, electron magnetic moments, multiple‐quantum transitions, and nuclear hyperfine interactions. Excitation by electron impact has permitted the study of atomic levels not accessible with resonance radiation.
Alfred Kastler
Alfred Kastler
Ecole Normale Superieure
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Physics Today 20 (9), 34–41 (1967);
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Alfred Kastler; Optical methods for the study of radio‐frequency resonances. Physics Today 1 September 1967; 20 (9): 34–41. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.3034481
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