Abstract
IN a letter to Nature, Kimball and Bates1 stated that they have succeeded in obtaining the band spectrum of AsH. The spectrum was excited in a carbon arc run in an atmosphere of hydrogen. The lower electrode formed the cathode of the arc and contained the arsenic. Two bands with origins at 32,380.2 cm.−1 and 31,639.9 cm.−1 were observed and attributed to AsH. The lines of the band at 32,380.2 cm.−1 are represented by the formula We have tried to photograph the bands mentioned by Kimball and Bates but without success, although a large range of excitation conditions has been used.
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References
Kimball, G. E., and Bates, J. R., Nature, 128, 969 (1931).
Heimer, Tage, Z. Phys., 78, 771 (1932).
Pearse, R. W. B., and Gaydon, A. G., “The Identification of Molecular Spectra” (Chapman and Hall, London, 1950).
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NAUDÉ, S., HUGO, T. Band Spectrum of AsH. Nature 170, 289–290 (1952). https://doi.org/10.1038/170289b0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/170289b0
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