23 research outputs found
On the importance of satellite lines to the He-like K ALPHA complex and the G ratio for calcium, iron, and nickel
New, more detailed calculations of the emission spectra of the He-like K
ALPHA complex of calcium, iron and nickel have been carried out using data from
both distorted-wave and R-matrix calculations. The value of the GD ratio (an
extended definition of the G ratio that accounts for the effect of resolved and
unresolved satellite lines) is significantly enhanced at temperatures below the
temperature of He-like maximum abundance. Furthermore it is shown that
satellite lines are important contributors to the GD ratio such that GD/G>1 at
temperatures well above the temperature of maximum abundance. These new
calculations demonstrate, with an improved treatment of the KLn (n>=3)
satellite lines, that K ALPHA satellite lines need to be included in models of
He like spectra even at relatively high temperatures. The excellent agreement
between spectra and line ratios calculated from R-matrix and distorted-wave
data also confirms the validity of models based on distorted-wave data for
highly charged systems, provided the effect of resonances are taken into
account as independent processes.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Monthly Notices of the Royal
Astronomical Society. The definitive version is available at
www.blackwell-synergy.co
The 6.7 keV KALPHA complex of He-like iron in transient plasmas
Time dependent numerical simulations of the K ALPHA complex of Fe XXV are
carried out as a function of temperature/density/radiation field variations in
high-temperature astrophysical and laboratory plasmas. In addition to several
well known features, the transient and steady state spectra reveal the effects
due to (a) time-dependent thermal and non-thermal radiation fields, (b) photo
and collisional excitation and ionization, and (c) high densities, on the
`quartet' of principal w,x,y,z lines, and dielectronic satellites. The highly
detailed models show precisely how, assuming a temporal-temperature
correlation, the X-ray intensity varies between 6.6 - 6.7 keV and undergoes a
`spectral inversion' in the w and z line intensities, characterizing an
ionization or a recombination dominated plasma. The dielectronic satellite
intensities are the most temperature dependent features, but insensitive to
density variations, and significantly contribute to the K ALPHA complex for T <
6.7 keV leading to asymmetric profiles. The 6.7 keV K ALPHA complex should be a
potential diagnostic of X-ray flares in AGN, afterglows in gamma-ray bursts,
and other non-equilibrium sources with the high-resolution measurements
possible from the upcoming mission Astro-E2. It is also shown that high
electron densities attenuate the line intensities in simulations relevant to
laboratory plasmas, such as in inertial confinement fusion, laser, or magnetic
Z-pinch devices.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, 1 postscript coversheet. This is a preprint of
an article accepted for publication in the Monthly Notices of the Royal
Astronomical Societ
Recombination Rate Coefficients for KLL Di-electronic Satellite Lines of Fe XXV and Ni XXVII
The unified method for total electron-ion recombination is extended to study
the dielectronic satellite (DES) lines. These lines, formed from radiative
decay of autoionizing states, are highly sensitive temperature diagnostics of
astrophysical and laboratory plasma sources. The computation of the unified
recombination rates is based on the relativistic Breit-Pauli R-matrix method
and close coupling approximation. Extending the theoretical formulation
developed earlier we present recombination rate coefficients for the 22
satellite lines of KLL complexes of helium-like Fe XXV and Ni XXVII. The
isolated resonance approximation, commonly used throughout plasma modeling,
treats these resonances essentially as bound features except for dielectronic
capture into, and autoionization out of, these levels. A line profile or cross
section shape is often assumed. On the other hand, by including the coupling
between the autoionizing and continuum channels, the unified method gives the
intrinsic spectrum of DES lines which includes not only the energies and
strengths, but also the natural line or cross section shapes. A formulation is
presented to derive autoionization rates from unified resonance strengths and
enable correspondence with the isolated resonance approximation. While the
rates compare very well with existing rates for the strong lines to <20%, the
differences for weaker DES lines are larger. We also illustrate the application
of the present results to the analysis of K ALPHA complexes observed in
high-temperature X-ray emission spectra of Fe XXV and Ni XXVII. There are
considerable differences with previous results in the total KLL intensity for
Fe XXV at temperatures below the temperature of maximum abundance in coronal
equilibrium. (Abbreviated Abstract)Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Physica Script
High-temperature behaviour of the helium-like Kα G ratio: the effect of improved recombination rate coefficients for calcium, iron and nickel
Relevant data is available at: http://www.astronomy.ohio-state.edu/~nahar/nahar_radiativeatomicdata/index.htmlThe definitive version is available at www.blackwell-synergy.com. http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/117975880/abstractIt is shown that above the temperature of maximum abundance, recombination rates into the excited states of He-like ions that are calculated using earlier, more approximate methods differ markedly from rates obtained from recent distorted-wave and R-matrix calculations (unified recombination rate coefficients) for Ca, Fe and Ni. The present rates lead to G ratios that are greatly lower than those resulting from the more approximate rates in previous works, by up
to a factor of 6 at high electron temperatures. Excellent agreement between the distorted-wave and the R-matrix rates, as well as excellent agreement in the G ratios calculated from them, provides
support for the accuracy of these new values which have a broad applicability to the modelling and interpreting of X-ray spectra from a variety of astrophysical and laboratory sources.The work by the OSU group (MM, SNN, AKP) was partially supported by a grant from the NASA Astrophysical Theory Program
X-ray absorption via K-alpha resonance complexes in oxygen ions
The K-alpha resonance complexes in oxygen ions O I - O VI are theoretically
computed and resonance oscillator strengths and wavelengths are presented. The
highly resolved photoionization cross sections, with relativistic fine
structure, are computed in the coupled channel approximation using the
Breit-Pauli R-matrix method. A number of strong K-alpha resonances are found to
be appreciable, with resonance oscillator strengths f_r > 0.1. The K-alpha
resonance wavelengths of O I-O VI lie in a relatively narrow wavelength range
22 - 23.5 A, and the X-ray opacity in this region should therefore be
significantly affected by K --> L transitions in oxygen. The results should be
useful in the interpretation of soft X-ray spectra observed from Chandra and
XMM-Newton.Comment: Monthly Notices of Roy. Astro. Soc. (in press), 10 pgs. 1 figur
A study of the breakdown of the quasi-static approximation at high densities and its effect on the helium-like K ALPHA complex of nickel, iron, and calcium
The General Spectral Modeling (GSM) code employs the quasi-static
approximation, a standard, low-density methodology that assumes the ionization
balance is separable from a determination of the excited-state populations that
give rise to the spectra. GSM also allows for some states to be treated only as
contributions to effective rates. While these two approximations are known to
be valid at low densities, this work investigates using such methods to model
high-density, non-LTE emission spectra and determines at what point the
approximations break down by comparing to spectra produced by the LANL code
ATOMIC which makes no such approximations. As both approximations are used by
other astrophysical and low-density modeling codes, the results should be of
broad interest. He-like K emission spectra are presented for Ni, Fe,
and Ca, in order to gauge the effect of both approximations employed in GSM.
This work confirms that at and above the temperature of maximum abundance of
the He-like ionization stage, the range of validity for both approximations is
sufficient for modeling the low- and moderate-density regimes one typically
finds in astrophysical and magnetically confined fusion plasmas. However, a
breakdown does occur for high densities; we obtain quantitative limits that are
significantly higher than previous works. This work demonstrates that, while
the range of validity for both approximations is sufficient to predict the
density-dependent quenching of the z line, the approximations break down at
higher densities. Thus these approximations should be used with greater care
when modeling high-density plasmas such as those found in inertial confinement
fusion and electromagnetic pinch devices.Comment: Accepted by Physical Review A (http://pra.aps.org/). 11 pages + LANL
cover, 5 figures. Will update citation information as it becomes available.
Abbreviated abstract is listed her
On the importance of satellite lines to the helium-like Kα complex and the G ratio for calcium, iron and nickel
ABSTRACT New, more detailed calculations of the emission spectra of the He-like Kα complex of calcium, iron and nickel have been carried out using data from both distorted-wave and R-matrix calculations. The value of the GD ratio (an extended definition of the G ratio that accounts for the effect of resolved and unresolved satellite lines) is significantly enhanced at temperatures below the temperature of He-like maximum abundance. Furthermore, it is shown that satellite lines are important contributors to the GD ratio such that GD/G > 1 at temperatures well above the temperature of maximum abundance. These new calculations demonstrate, with an improved treatment of the KLn (n ≥ 3) satellite lines, that Kα satellite lines need to be included in models of He-like spectra even at relatively high temperatures. The excellent agreement between spectra and line ratios calculated from R-matrix and distorted-wave data also confirms the validity of models based on distorted-wave data for highly charged systems, provided the effect of resonances is taken into account as independent processes