Photon-in-photon-out
Spectroscopy
is a means to obtain information from
atomic
systems (
matter
) by recording their response to an external
excitation
. One can classify the type of spectroscopy by the means of excitation (
e.g.
photons
or
electrons
) and the kind of "
particles
" that are detected. Thus
photon-in-photon-out
spectroscopy refers to all kinds of scattering of
electromagnetic radiation
,
e.g.
X-ray emission spectroscopy
. An important example for a photon-in-
electron
-out spectroscopy is photoelectron or
photoemission spectroscopy
.
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