Monday, December 11, 2023

Revisiting Stellar Spectral Line Formation & Transitions (2)

 What are spectral lines and how are they formed? It is first necessary to understand that a “line” is really an idealization. It exists only to the extent that it is distinctive and is only distinctive to the degree it corresponds to a specific wavelength (or frequency) for which the absorption coefficient, i.e.

a u  =  7.91 x 10 16   Z 4/ n 5  (Ry / h u )3  g

is greater than usual. (Else it would not have a very good chance of escaping before absorption).   There are also two distinct processes by which lines can be formed:

1)     Bound-bound transitions

2)    Bound-free transitions

     In the first case, the photon goes from one bound atom to another, such as depicted in the diagram below for the transitions between energy levels in the hydrogen atom.


Emission occurs when an electron in the atom makes a transition from a higher to a lower energy level. This is always  accompanied by the emission of a photon with a defined energy E = hf = h (c/ l). Consider for example, a transition from the n = 2 to the n = 1 level, as depicted in the lower left of the preceding diagram, i.e. the first line of the Lyman series.

The energy at the n= 2 level is:

E(n=2) =  - 13.6/ n2   = - 13.6/ (2)2      =  - 13.6/4  (eV)

Now, 1 eV =  1.6 x 10-19 J  so:

E(n=2) =  - 13.6/4  (eV) =  -(3.4) x 1.6 x 10-19 J  =

 -5.4 x  10-19

 The n= 1 level has energy:

E(n=1) =  - 13.6/ n2   = - 13.6/ (1)2      =  - 13.6  (eV)

E(n=1) =  -(13.6)  x 1.6 x 10-19 J  = -21.8 x 10-19

Then the energy difference is:

E2 – E1 = [- 5.4 – (-21.8)]  x 10-19 J  = 16.4 x 10 -19

From this, the wavelength of the photon emitted can be found. 

Since E = hf = h (c/ l):   l =   hc/ (E2 – E1) 

l =    (6.626069 x 10- 34 J-s)(3 x 10 8 m/s)/ 16.4 x 10-19

l =    1.21 x 10 -7

The frequency can then be found from:

f = (c/ l) = (3 x 10 8 m/s) / 1.21 x 10 -7 m  = 2.47 x 10 15 Hz

The Balmer series emission lines for hydrogen are shown in the graphic below:



Bound-bound transitions (such as those shown)  differ in significant ways from bound-free transitions. In the first case, the transitions are also affected by a broadening function which is not so important for continuous emission. If we write out the equation for absorption in more detail we get:

a u  =  [1 - e -  h u o / kT] (p e2/ mc) f f u

which yields units in  cm2 / atoms at lower level. Two other absorption derivative values are possible from the preceding:

(i)The absorption coefficient per unit length (cm-1)

(ii)The mass absorption coefficient  k u .

      The value for (i) is just a u  multiplied by the number of absorbing atoms per unit volume. The value for  k u  is just  multiplied by the number of absorbing atoms.  The value for a o   is just:                  

        a o a u  /  f u.  

     Sometimes referred to as a “fudge factor”, f is known as the oscillator strength or f-value of the line. It is basically the transition probability for the line and is to be computed by quantum mechanics or measured in the laboratory. 

The broadening function  f u  is:

f u  =   1/ Öp   [exp (u  -u o)  /D u D ]2  D uD

Which can also be rewritten as:   f u  du  =

1/ Öp   [exp (u  - u o)  /D uD ]2  du / D uD

This would be the probability that the absorbed photon lies between u  and  u +  du, assuming equal intensities for all frequencies. Thus the integral:

ò f u  du  =  1

Where du is over all frequencies.  The value of f u  is larger near  u o  the frequency of the line center.

This  may be deduced from the line profile diagram below (for the sodium 5889.95 A   line):


Note here that  D uD  is the Doppler half-width of the line. As can be seen on inspection, the broadening function, f u is very large at line center and falls off in the “wings”, i.e. at larger and smaller frequencies.  (Called ‘wings’ because of the  visual similarity to wings in the line profile.)

    The three important types of broadening are due to Doppler effect, natural and pressure broadening. We confine our attention here to the first type which is given by the broadening probability equation, provided the velocity is Maxwellian and that the frequency at line center o is also observed for  some known frequency  u .

At the same time we note in passing that the natural broadening is a consequence of the energy-time uncertainty principle: ΔE Δ t ³  h/2π where we define the probability for a specific decay as: P =   10-6  sec.

 The study of spectral lines is facilitated by using what is called the “equivalent width”. This provides the total strength of a line, yielding the same area of the line (for a rectangular facsimile) provided the depth is complete from the continuum to zero brightness. 

We can express the equivalent width in two ways, based on frequency  (u)  or wavelength (l):

W =   ò ¥0  (I c – I u /  I c )duò ¥0  (F c – F l / F c ) dl

The left side defines W in terms of the intensity e.g. from the continuous spectrum outside of the spectral line where the quantity (I c – I u/ I c ) is referred to as the “depth of the line”.  This is the analogous quantity to (F c – F l / F c ) on the right side where we have radiant flux units. Technically, the integral should be taken only from one side of the line to the other but the limits can be as shown provided I c   (or  F c)  is kept constant in the neighborhood of the line.

Suggested Problems:

1) Find the frequency of the spectral line for which the hydrogen electron transits from the n=3 to the n= 2 energy level.

2)For the Balmer a line (called H- alpha), we know:

E3 – E2 =  - 13.6 eV ( 1/   -  1/ 2 2 )   = 1.88 eV

a)    From this information calculate the ratio N2/ N1   for T = 10 4  K

 

b) Obtain the frequency of the spectral line for this transition

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At the n=1 level the statistical weight is:  g = 2(1)2 = 2

At the n=2 level the statistical weight is: g = 2(2)2 = 8


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