RichPeterson
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Has study or experimentation been done on chemically and isotopically pure carbon at very low temperatures? Thanks, Rich Peterson
How is this different from garden variety thermal broadening that is seen in virtually every spectrum of any material?nanoWatt said:In laser spectroscopy, crystals emit shorter bandwidths at very low temperatures. So their radiation has sharper peaks. Carbon might have similar properties if it has any spectroscopic use.
Unless I'm misunderstanding you completely, this is perfectly natural behavior that is not characteristic of your specific material. Take a look at the temperature dependence of any photoluminescence spectrum, or x-ray diffraction/fluorescence spectra, or spin resonance spectra, etc.nanoWatt said:I am not sure, since I studied the laser crystals many years ago. We cooled them to liquid Helium temperatures, and just noticed the emission peaks became very sharp.
Rajini said:somewhere i read carbon conducts electricity at some specific temperature...is it true?