161 research outputs found
Inelastic O+H collisions and the OI 777nm solar centre-to-limb variation
The OI 777 nm triplet is a key diagnostic of oxygen abundances in the
atmospheres of FGK-type stars; however it is sensitive to departures from local
thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE). The accuracy of non-LTE line formation
calculations has hitherto been limited by errors in the inelastic O+H
collisional rate coefficients: several recent studies have used the so-called
Drawin recipe, albeit with a correction factor that is
calibrated to the solar centre-to-limb variation of the triplet. We present a
new model oxygen atom that incorporates inelastic O+H collisional rate
coefficients using an asymptotic two-electron model based on linear
combinations of atomic orbitals, combined with a free electron model, based on
the impulse approximation. Using a 3D hydrodynamic stagger model solar
atmosphere and 3D non-LTE line formation calculations, we demonstrate that this
physically-motivated approach is able to reproduce the solar centre-to-limb
variation of the triplet to 0.02 dex, without any calibration of the inelastic
collisional rate coefficients or other free parameters. We infer
from the triplet alone, strengthening
the case for a low solar oxygen abundance.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures; published in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Quantum-Mechanical Calculations of Cross Sections for Electron Collisions With Atoms and Molecules
An overview of quantumâmechanical methods to generate crossâsection data for electron collisions with atoms and molecules is presented. Particular emphasis is placed on the timeâindependent closeâcoupling approach, since it is particularly suitable for lowâenergy collisions and also allows for systematic improvements as well as uncertainty estimates. The basic ideas are illustrated with examples for electron collisions with argon atoms and methane. For many atomic systems, such as eâAr collisions, highly reliable cross sections can now be computed with quantified uncertainties. On the other hand, while electron collision calculations with molecules do provide key input data for plasma models, the methods, and computer codes presently used require further development to make these inputs robust
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Dielectronic recombination data for dynamic finite-density plasmas VII. The neon isoelectronic sequence
Dielectronic recombination (DR) and radiative recombination (RR) data for neon-like ions forming sodium-like systems has been calculated as part of the assembly of a DR database necessary for modelling of dynamic and/or finite-density plasmas (Badnell et al. 2003). Dielectronic recombination coefficients for neon-like ions from Na+ to Zn20+, as well as Kr26+, Mo32+, Cd38+, and Xe44+, are presented and the results discussed
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Dielectronic recombination data for dynamic finite-density plasmas II. The oxygen isoelectronic sequence
Dielectronic recombination (DR) and radiative recombination (RR) data for oxygen-like ions forming fluorine-like ions have been calculated as part of the assembly of a level-resolved DR and RR database necessary for modelling of dynamic finite-density plasmas (Badnell et al. 2003). Total DR and RR rate coefficients for F+ to Zn22+ are presented and the results discussed. By comparison between perturbative and R-matrix results, we find that RR/DR interference effects are negligible even for the lowest-charged F+ member. We also find that the 2â2 low-temperature DR (no change in the principal quantum number of the core electrons) does not scale smoothly with nuclear charge Z due to resonances straddling the ionization limit, thereby making explicit calculations for each ion necessary. These RR and DR data are suitable for modelling of solar and cosmic plasmas under conditions of collisional ionization equilibrium, photoionization equilibrium, and non-equilibrium ionization
Electron Scattering Cross-Section Calculations for Atomic and Molecular Iodine
Cross sections for electron scattering from atomic and molecular iodine are calculated based on the R-matrix (close-coupling) method. Elastic and electronic excitation cross sections are presented for both I and I2. The dissociative electron attachment and vibrational excitation cross sections of the iodine molecule are obtained using the local complex potential approximation. Ionization cross sections are also computed for I2 using the BEB mode
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