The experimental set-up (shown in Fig. 1) and the methods have already been described in Gigosos et al. (1994), Aparicio et al. (1997, 1998). Here we summarize the specific details corresponding to the present experiment.
The source of plasma consists of a cylindrical tube of
Pyrex glass with 175 mm in length and 19 mm in
interior diameter. The lamp has been designed to
avoid sputtering as much as possible. The plasmas were created
by discharging a capacitor bank of 20 F charged up to 7.5 kV.
During the whole experiment the lamp was working with a
continuous flow of a mixture of helium and nitrogen, at a rate of
10 cm3/min and 5 cm3/min respectively and a global pressure
of 1340 Pa. In these conditions, the NII emission lasts around
200
s. The gas was pre-ionised in order to obtain the best
discharge reliability. Spectroscopic and interferometric end-on
measurements have been made simultaneously through the plasma life,
and have been taken 2 mm off the lamp axis, and from symmetrical
positions referred to it. The high axial homogeneity and the
very good cylindrical symmetry of electron density and
temperature in this lamp allows this (del Val et al. 1998).
According to Fig. 1, the lamp is placed in one of the
arms of a Twyman-Green interferometer simultaneously illuminated
with an argon ion laser (488.0 nm) and by an He-Ne laser (632.8 nm).
The spectroscopic beam is directed (3 mm pinholes S1, S2, separated 1.5 m)
and focused (cylindrical lens L with 150 mm focal length) onto the
entrance slit of a Jobin-Yvon spectrometer (1.5 m focal length,
1200 lines/mm holographic grating), equipped with an optical
multichannel analyser (OMA). This OMA has a detector array which is
divided into 512 channels (EG&G 1455R-512-HQ). The dispersion was
12.59 pm/channel at 589.0 nm in first order of diffraction. The
spectrometer was very carefully calibrated in wavelength as well as in
intensity (Aparicio et al. 1997). Time exposures for
the spectra were 5 s. Mirror M 3, placed behind the plasma column, was
used to measure the optical depth and to detect possible self-absorption
effects on each line profile. This can be done
by comparing the spectra taken with and without the light
reflected by this mirror.
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