The quantum defect of a laser can be defined as the part of the energy of the pumping photon which is lost (not turned into photons at the lasing wavelength) in the gain medium during lasing. At given frequency of pump and given frequency of lasing, the quantum defect . Such a quantum defect has dimensions of energy; for the efficient operation, the temperature of the gain medium (measured in units of energy) should be small compared to the quantum defect.
The quantum defect may also be defined as follows: at a given frequency of pump and given frequency of lasing, the quantum defect ; according to this definition, quantum defect is dimensionless. At a fixed pump frequency, the higher the quantum defect, the lower is the upper bound for the power efficiency.
The 1/ r potential in the hydrogen atom leads to an electron binding energy given by where is the Rydberg constant, is the Planck constant, is the speed of light and is the principal quantum number.
For alkali metal with small orbital angular momentum, the wavefunction of the valence electron is non-negligible in the ion core where the screened Coulomb potential with an effective charge of e no longer describes the potential. The spectrum is still described well by the Rydberg formula with an angular momentum dependent quantum defect, :
The largest shifts occur when the orbital angular momentum is zero (normally labeled 's') and these are shown in the table for the alkali metals:C.J.Foot, Atomic Physics, Oxford University Press,
0.41 |
1.37 |
2.23 |
3.19 |
4.13 |
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