Abstract
In two preliminary papers we have recorded the discovery that when monochromatic light is scattered in a transparent medium (be it gas, vapour, liquid, amorphous solid or crystal), the diffused radiation ceases to be monochromatic, and several new lines or sometimes bands (associated in many cases with a continuous spectrum) appear in the spectrograms of the diffused radiation. Further, the new radiations are, in general, strongly polarised. That the phenomenon is entirely distinct from what is usually known as fluorescence is clear from the fact that the effect is observed when both the exciting radiation and the new radiations generated by it are far removed from the characteristic ultra-violet and infra-red frequencies of the medium. As an illustration we may mention the case of transparent crystalline quartz in which the effect is very well shown with the 4358 A. U. line of mercury as the exciting line, the new lines also appearing in the indigo-blue region of the spectrum. Our preliminary studies have proved conclusively that the effect arises in the following way: The incident quantum of radiation is either scattered as a whole, in which case we have the classical scattering, or else is absorbed in part by the molecules of the medium, the remaining part appearing as a scattered quantum. The part absorbed shifts the molecule to a level of energy different from the initial state. The possibility of a process of this kind, in respect of the electronic state of an atom, was first contemplated by Smekal, and figures prominently in the theory of dispersion due to Kramers and Heisenberg, and in the papers of Schrödinger. Our experiments furnish definite proof of the possibility of such processes, and show that they may occur also in such complicated systems as the molecules of a vapour or a liquid or even in a complete crystal. In the series of papers of which this is the first our further studies of the new radiations will be discussed.
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