The FERRUM Project: experimental and theoretical transition rates of forbidden [Sc II] lines and radiative lifetimes of metastable Sc II levels
H. Hartman (1), J. Gurell (2), P. Lundin (2), P. Schef (2), A. Hibbert, (3), H. Lundberg (4), S. Mannervik (2), L.-O. Norlin (5), P. Royen (2) ((1), Lund Observatory, Sweden, (2) Department of Physics, Stockholm University,, Sweden, (3) Queen's University, Belfast

TL;DR
This study combines astrophysical observations, laboratory measurements, and theoretical calculations to determine accurate transition rates and lifetimes of forbidden [Sc II] lines, crucial for plasma diagnostics.
Contribution
It provides the first combined experimental and theoretical data set for forbidden [Sc II] transition rates and metastable lifetimes, improving plasma diagnostic accuracy.
Findings
Experimental lifetimes of Sc II metastable levels measured.
Transition rates for key forbidden lines determined.
Theoretical calculations agree well with experimental data.
Abstract
Context. In many plasmas, long-lived metastable atomic levels are depopulated by collisions (quenched) before they decay radiatively. In low-density regions, however, the low collision rate may allow depopulation by electric dipole (E1) forbidden radiative transitions, so-called forbidden lines (mainly M1 and E2 transitions). If the atomic transition data are known, these lines are indicators of physical plasma conditions and used for abundance determination. Aims. Transition rates can be derived by combining relative intensities between the decay channels, so-called branching fractions (BFs), and the radiative lifetime of the common upper level. We use this approach for forbidden [Sc ii] lines, along with new calculations. Methods. Neither BFs for forbidden lines, nor lifetimes of metastable levels, are easily measured in a laboratory. Therefore, astrophysical BFs measured in Space…
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