What is Fermi-Resonance ?
In diatomic molecules two vibrations, one from each of the two different electronic transitions, can have nearly the same energy. This accidental degeneracy is called Fermi-resonance (after Enrico Fermi who first worked on such quantum degeneracy). In polyatomic molecules such as carbon dioxide (CO2), the vibrational and rotational structure is so complex and dense that two vibrations within the same electronic transition can be in accidental degeneracy and hence in Fermi resonance.
Our experiment deals with High-resolution and high sensitive nonlinear spectroscopy of vibrational and rotational transitions in the Fermi-resonance region of polyatomic molecule. Such spectroscopy require quantum limited detection sensitivity and very high frequency resolution. This research also deals with experimental development of pulsed precision measurement technique.
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Reference: Raman Spectra of Carbon Dioxide and its Isotopic Variants in the Fermi-Resonance Regions: Part I
H. Finsterholz, H. W. Klockner, K. Srinivasan, H. W. Schrotter, and J. Brandmuller,
J. Pure Appl. Phys. 16, 370-375 (1978).
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