Research Activities


Highly charge ions are atoms with very high degree of ionization, due to their unshielded coulomb  field the interaction which are negligible in in neutral mode become dominant because they scale with different powers of nuclear charge Z. Electron binding energy is large so Coulomb field has a long range interaction which enhances intensity of multipole transitions. The reduced electron screening causes inner shell effects to become more important.  All of the these properties are dependent on Z which can be treated as a controllable experimental parameter.  Accurate atomic reference data based on the physical parameters such as  energy level and lifetime  are essential requirement for development  of astrophysical models that may be  used  to  simulate the astrophysical observation of interest so as to extract macroscopic information about non-terrestrial objects.  Further  such experimental data bank can be used to test the  accuracy as well as the reliability  of "classical  atomic theories "  which  are used  for calculation of  various  physical parameters of neutral as well as semi neutral atoms.   However the atomic data on highly charged ions are very scanty. Data are available from  beam-foil  spectroscopy. However accuracy of such data comes in to question due to population of  various charge states  in beam-foil  interactions which results in  satellite blending of the transitions of  interest.  Only  solution to the problem is to use  detectors having resolution about 20 times better that that of  commercially  available   X-ray  energy dispersive  detectors. 

In recent couple of years,  lot of efforts have been put  in collaboration with various  National  Universities and  Institutes to build  the various facilities.   Especially, facility for lifetime measurement  of metastable states using beam- single and beam- two -foil techniques have  been developed  indigenously using solid state X-ray  energy dispersive  detectors.  Lifetime measurement setup have flight path of about 80 mm which makes it possible to make experimental study of  states with lifetime up to  a few  hundred pico seconds.  Experiments  using beam- single- foil as well as beam-two- foil  technique  in determining the lifetimes of both parent as well as satellite lines. Thus the  setup is only of its kind in at International Level. The analysis of  time of flight data is not at all  straight forward  due to the population of the various charge states  in the post foil beam.   A novel data analysis technique applying  iterative multi-component exponential growth and decay analyses to separate contribution from transitions in other charge states that cannot be spectrally resolved   has been  developed . 

The present model analysis is base on certain approximations on beam -foil excitation mechanism. To  get rid of  such approximation in the analysis,  presently the research efforts  are focussed on development of an ultra high resolution Doppler Tuned Spectrometer which would  have resolution  of about 5-10 eV at ~6 keV.   Development of this facility would  access to  inner cores of the  atomic structure never   explored before. 

It may be worth noting that besides the reliable lifetimes this method gives us opportunity to investigate   the mechanism of excited states interacting with a thin carbon foil.  Some experiments have been performed to study the  intra-shell transition mechanism. 

Further,  X-ray lines  out of the expected  window in the beam-foil spectra  have been analyzed to be originated from  electron capture processes followed by nuclear events.  Investigations on these lines have  opened up a new opportunity to  study rare phenomenon such as ternary recombination.