92 research outputs found

    Electron Impact Excitation Cross Sections for Hydrogen-Like Ions

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    We present cross sections for electron-impact-induced transitions n --> n' in hydrogen-like ions C 5+, Ne 9+, Al 12+, and Ar 17+. The cross sections are computed by Coulomb-Born with exchange and normalization (CBE) method for all transitions with n < n' < 7 and by convergent close-coupling (CCC) method for transitions with n 2s and 1s --> 2p are presented as well. The CCC and CBE cross sections agree to better than 10% with each other and with earlier close-coupling results (available for transition 1 --> 2 only). Analytical expression for n --> n' cross sections and semiempirical formulae are discussed.Comment: RevTeX, 5 pages, 13 PostScript figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Electron impact excitation cross sections for allowed transitions in atoms

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    We present a semiempirical Gaunt factor for widely used Van Regemorter formula [Astrophys. J. 136, 906 (1962)] for the case of allowed transitions in atoms with the LS coupling scheme. Cross sections calculated using this Gaunt factor agree with measured cross sections to within the experimental error.Comment: RevTeX, 3 pages, 10 PS figures, 2 PS tables, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Dynamics and Radiation of Young Type-Ia Supernova Remnants: Important Physical Processes

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    We examine and analyze the physical processes that should be taken into account when modeling young type-Ia SNRs, with ages of several hundred years. It is shown, that energy losses in the metal-rich ejecta can be essential for remnants already at this stage of evolution. The influence of electron thermal conduction and the rate of the energy exchange between electrons and ions on the temperature distribution and the X-radiation from such remnants is studied. The data for Tycho SNR from the XMM-Newton X-ray telescope have been employed for the comparison of calculations with observations.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figure

    Formation of Zr I and II lines under non-LTE conditions of stellar atmospheres

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    The non-local thermodynaic equilibrium (non-LTE) line formation for the two ions of zirconium is considered through a range of spectral types when the Zr abundance varies from the solar value down to [Zr/H] = -3. The model atom was built using 148 energy levels of Zr I, 772 levels of Zr II, and the ground state of Zr III. It was shown that the main non-LTE mechnism for the minority species Zr I is ultraviolet overionization. Non-LTE leads to systematically depleted total absorption in the Zr I lines and positive abundance corrections, reaching to 0.33 dex for the solar metallicity models. The excited levels of Zr II are overpopulated relative to their thermodynamic equilibrium populations in the line formation layers due to radiative pumping from the low-excitation levels. As a result, the line source function exceeds the Planck function leading to weakening the Zr II lines and positive non-LTE abundance corrections. Such corrections grow towards lower metallicity and lower surface gravity and reach to 0.34 dex for Teff = 5500 K, log g = 2.0, [M/H] = -2. As a test and first application of the Zr I-Zr II model atom, Zr abundance was determined for the Sun on the basis of 1D LTE model atmosphere. Lines of Zr I and Zr II give consistent within the error bars non-LTE abundances, while the difference in LTE abundances amounts to 0.28 dex. The solar abundance of zirconium obtained with the MAFAGS solar model atmosphere is log eps(Zr) = 2.63+-0.07.Comment: published in Astron. Letters, 36, 664 (2010); Erratum was submitte

    Spectra of supernovae in the nebular phase

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    When supernovae enter the nebular phase after a few months, they reveal spectral fingerprints of their deep interiors, glowing by radioactivity produced in the explosion. We are given a unique opportunity to see what an exploded star looks like inside. The line profiles and luminosities encode information about physical conditions, explosive and hydrostatic nucleosynthesis, and ejecta morphology, which link to the progenitor properties and the explosion mechanism. Here, the fundamental properties of spectral formation of supernovae in the nebular phase are reviewed. The formalism between ejecta morphology and line profile shapes is derived, including effects of scattering and absorption. Line luminosity expressions are derived in various physical limits, with examples of applications from the literature. The physical processes at work in the supernova ejecta, including gamma-ray deposition, non-thermal electron degradation, ionization and excitation, and radiative transfer are described and linked to the computation and application of advanced spectral models. Some of the results derived so far from nebular-phase supernova analysis are discussed.Comment: Book chapter for 'Handbook of Supernovae,' edited by Alsabti and Murdin, Springer. 51 pages, 14 figure

    Radiative transfer with scattering for domain-decomposed 3D MHD simulations of cool stellar atmospheres

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    We present the implementation of a radiative transfer solver with coherent scattering in the new BIFROST code for radiative magneto-hydrodynamical (MHD) simulations of stellar surface convection. The code is fully parallelized using MPI domain decomposition, which allows for large grid sizes and improved resolution of hydrodynamical structures. We apply the code to simulate the surface granulation in a solar-type star, ignoring magnetic fields, and investigate the importance of coherent scattering for the atmospheric structure. A scattering term is added to the radiative transfer equation, requiring an iterative computation of the radiation field. We use a short-characteristics-based Gauss-Seidel acceleration scheme to compute radiative flux divergences for the energy equation. The effects of coherent scattering are tested by comparing the temperature stratification of three 3D time-dependent hydrodynamical atmosphere models of a solar-type star: without scattering, with continuum scattering only, and with both continuum and line scattering. We show that continuum scattering does not have a significant impact on the photospheric temperature structure for a star like the Sun. Including scattering in line-blanketing, however, leads to a decrease of temperatures by about 350\,K below log tau < -4. The effect is opposite to that of 1D hydrostatic models in radiative equilibrium, where scattering reduces the cooling effect of strong LTE lines in the higher layers of the photosphere. Coherent line scattering also changes the temperature distribution in the high atmosphere, where we observe stronger fluctuations compared to a treatment of lines as true absorbers.Comment: A&A, in pres

    The GALAH Survey : Non-LTE departure coefficients for large spectroscopic surveys

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    19 pages, 25 figures, 2 tables, arXiv abstract abridged; accepted for publication in A&AMassive sets of stellar spectroscopic observations are rapidly becoming available and these can be used to determine the chemical composition and evolution of the Galaxy with unprecedented precision. One of the major challenges in this endeavour involves constructing realistic models of stellar spectra with which to reliably determine stellar abundances. At present, large stellar surveys commonly use simplified models that assume that the stellar atmospheres are approximately in local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE). To test and ultimately relax this assumption, we have performed non-LTE calculations for 1313 different elements (H, Li, C, N, O, Na, Mg, Al, Si, K, Ca, Mn, and Ba), using recent model atoms that have physically-motivated descriptions for the inelastic collisions with neutral hydrogen, across a grid of 37563756 1D MARCS model atmospheres that spans 3000Teff/K80003000\leq T_{\mathrm{eff}}/\mathrm{K}\leq8000, 0.5logg/cms25.5-0.5\leq\log{g/\mathrm{cm\,s^{-2}}}\leq5.5, and 5[Fe/H]1-5\leq\mathrm{[Fe/H]}\leq1. We present the grids of departure coefficients that have been implemented into the GALAH DR3 analysis pipeline in order to complement the extant non-LTE grid for iron. We also present a detailed line-by-line re-analysis of 5012650126 stars from GALAH DR3. We found that relaxing LTE can change the abundances by between 0.7dex-0.7\,\mathrm{dex} and +0.2dex+0.2\,\mathrm{dex} for different lines and stars. Taking departures from LTE into account can reduce the dispersion in the [A/Fe]\mathrm{[A/Fe]} versus [Fe/H]\mathrm{[Fe/H]} plane by up to 0.1dex0.1\,\mathrm{dex}, and it can remove spurious differences between the dwarfs and giants by up to 0.2dex0.2\,\mathrm{dex}. The resulting abundance slopes can thus be qualitatively different in non-LTE, possibly with important implications for the chemical evolution of our Galaxy.Peer reviewe

    Light absorption by a collisional system

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    Perturbation theory is applied to the interaction between a binary collisional system and a weak radiation field to obtain the rate of induced absorption or the line profile of an optically allowed transition at low density. The collisional system wave functions are not affected by the radiation field and appropriate different expansions of these functions must be used for the two electron-atom or atom-atom systems under study. Unified expressions of the profile are given which converges to the impact limit at small detunings. The semi-classical approach of the collisional problem is given to underline the correspondence with the usual autocorrelation formalism. Both approaches break down for large detunings where a quantum collisional theory must be used.La théorie des perturbations appliquée à l'étude de l'interaction entre un champ faible et un système collisionnel binaire permet d'obtenir l'expression du taux d'absorption induit par collisions ou le profil spectral d'une transition optiquement permise à faible densité. Les fonctions d'onde du système collisionnel ne sont pas affectées par le champ radiatif et différents développements de ces fonctions sont utilisés suivant la nature du système: atome-électron ou atome-atome. Des expressions unifiées du profil sont données qui convergent vers la limite « impact » pour les petits désaccords Δω. L'approche semi-classique du problème collisionnel est donnée pour établir la correspondance avec le formalisme de la fonction d'autocorrélation. Aux grands désaccords ces deux approches sont en défaut et il est nécessaire d'utiliser un modèle collisionnel quantique
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