Investigations of the time dependence of the r-resonance absorption line intensity in c a s e of modulation by acoustic waves occupy a special place i n modulation Mossbauer spectroscopy. The first works in that field performed by Perlow and Monahan and Perlow /1, 2/ correspond to the case when the acoustic oscillation frequency is g r e a t e r than the absorption linewidth ra. In those papers the counting rate of ;r-quanta is shown to become dependent on time due t o the transition of the r-radiation frequency modulated by the source oscillations through the crystal. Harmonic composition and relative phase of the counting rate are sensitive t o small shifts of energy and may be used t o measure them. Paper /3/ reports lineshapes in Mossbauer experiments with sinusoidal phase modulation at frequencies close to the linewidth of the Mossbauer state.The present note suggests an experimental realization of the case considered in /4/ where the authors theoretically analysed the time-dependent Mossbauer spectroscopy when r-radiation was modulated by low-frequency acoustic oscillations (Wr).In our experiment the source of the resonant -6-quanta was 57C0 in a chromium matrix and a stainless steel foil 10 prn thick was chosen as an abs o r b e r . The block diagram of the experimental device is presented in Fig. 1.The r-radiation passes through the oscillating absorber 1 and is registered by the multichannel analyser 4 operating in a multiscalar.mode. The absorber is oscillated by the vibrosystem 2 supplied by a periodical voltage from the sound generator 5. The s a m e generator simultaneously excites circuit 6 which forms the starting pulse from each period t o start the internal sweep of the analyser channels.1) Hr. Nersesyan s t r . 25, 37501 4 Erevan, USSR.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.