Laboratory Measurements of White Dwarf Photospheric Spectral Lines: H$\beta$
Ross E. Falcon, G. A. Rochau, J. E. Bailey, T. A. Gomez, M. H., Montgomery, D. E. Winget, and T. Nagayama

TL;DR
This study uses laboratory plasma experiments to measure hydrogen Balmer line profiles, comparing them with theoretical models to improve understanding of white dwarf atmospheres and validate diagnostic methods.
Contribution
It provides experimental measurements of hydrogen Balmer lines under white dwarf-like conditions, testing and validating theoretical line profiles used in astrophysical models.
Findings
Electron density ranges from 4 to 30×10^{16} cm^{-3} during plasma evolution.
Hydrogen level populations equilibrate within ~55 ns, consistent with LTE.
Simulation-based line profiles fit experimental data better at high densities.
Abstract
We spectroscopically measure multiple hydrogen Balmer line profiles from laboratory plasmas to investigate the theoretical line profiles used in white dwarf atmosphere models. X-ray radiation produced at the Z Pulsed Power Facility at Sandia National Laboratories initiates plasma formation in a hydrogen-filled gas cell, replicating white dwarf photospheric conditions. Here we present time-resolved measurements of H and fit this line using different theoretical line profiles to diagnose electron density, , and level population, . Aided by synthetic tests, we characterize the validity of our diagnostic method for this experimental platform. During a single experiment, we infer a continuous range of electron densities increasing from to cm throughout a 120-ns evolution of our plasma. Also, we observe to be…
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