Nuclear Gamma Resonance (Mössbauer) Spectrosopy
Nuclear Gamma Resonance (NGR) relies on the resonant emission and absorption of γ-ray photons by atomic nuclei in a solid.
In spite of the large energies of the γ-rays involved, these processess occur without an energy loss due to nuclear recoil,
that is, they are recoiless. This is known as the
Mössbauer effect.
The energies of the nuclear levels are perturbed by the interaction of a nucleus with its environment.
Since a nucleus is surronunded by electrons its environment is known as the electronic structure of that site.
By measuring these small environment-induced changes in the energies of nuclear levels, this technique allows us to
use of atomic nuclei as probes of their immediate molecular environment. In other words we can use nuclei as spies
to look at molecules from the inside out. Among all Mössbauer-active elements, owing to its biological
and technological importance as well as relative ease with which the experimental spectra can be collected, Iron
is the most intensively investigated.

Such studies require the acquisition of a series of very low-temperature (usually 4.2 K) spectra collected
at varying magnetic field strengths and a series of temperature-dependent spectra recorded at a high-field
(usually the highest accessible field, which in our case is 8 T). A successful spectroscopic investigation
might require up to 20 spectra per sample. For these measurements liquid helium is used not only to maintain
the superconductivity of the magnet, but also to control the temperature of the sample space. While at 4.2 K the sample
is submerged in liquid helium, at higher temperatures the sample is cooled by a stream of helium gas. For our
instrument, an ideal sample should contain 40 - 60 µg of 57Fe corresponding to ~1 mg iron of natural abundance
for non-isotopically enriched samples. Even for these samples, recording a spectrum of a
suitable signal-to-noise ratio in an applied magnetic field will require up to a day of instrument time.
Therefore, the collection of an entire data-set might necessitate up to three weeks of instrument time per sample.
Since all this time the superconducting magnet needs to be kept cold and the sample in a stream of cold helium, cryogenic
liquid helium is a crucial requirement to field-dependent Mössbauer spectroscopy.