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Examples
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As an important example of the phenomena involving excited states studied by double resonance in Kastler's laboratory, I shall mention the narrowing of spectral lines with increasing gas pressure within the resonance chamber.
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Dr. Kastler and I provided the two necessary signatures.
Second Glance Jodi Picoult 2003
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Alfred Kastler (who received the Physics Prize in 1966) and his co-workers showed in the 1950s that electrons in atoms can be put into selected excited substates by the use of polarized light.
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Brossel and Kastler were in the lab nearly day and night, even on weekends.
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Shortly after my Ph.D. Alfred Kastler urged me to accept a teaching position at the University of Paris.
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I think that what I learned during that period was essential for my subsequent research work and key personalities such as Alfred Kastler and Jean Brossel certainly had a significant role in it.
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Then, in the beginning of 1960, I came back to the laboratory to do a Ph.D. under the supervision of Alfred Kastler and Jean
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Kastler, I remember, participated in the pedagogical training and he taught us how to organize and present our lecture.
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During seminars at Göttingen on the magnetic resonance techniques of Rabi and of Kastler, it had occurred to me that because of the analogy between an atom and a radio dipole antenna, (a), alignment of the atom should show up in its optical absorption cross section, and (b), electron impact should produce aligned excited atoms.
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One of them was Air Force Lieutenant Colonel James H. Kastler, a hero well before he was shot down on August 8, 1966.
Martin, Edward H. 1977
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