Many body effects in the line radiative transfer equation
Boy Lankhaar

TL;DR
This paper derives a new radiative transfer equation considering many-body effects in spectral lines, showing significant implications for interpreting astronomical observations and proposing a laboratory experiment to observe these effects.
Contribution
It introduces a first-principles derivation of the line radiative transfer equation that includes many-body effects and provides correction factors for different optical depth regimes.
Findings
Many-body effects significantly alter line profiles in astronomical observations.
The correction factor depends exponentially on the coherent optical depth.
A simple laboratory experiment is proposed to observe many-body effects.
Abstract
The radiative transfer equation for spectral lines from an extended gas is derived from first principles, treating the gas as a system of many atoms/molecules rather than isolated ones. Line broadening effects are assumed to be dominated by particle motions (Doppler effect), but collisional broadening effects are included in the impact approximation. We retrieve the canonical radiative transfer equation under the condition that the optical depth over a coherence length, defined as the transition-levels lifetime times the speed of light, is much lower than unity. For other cases, the line radiative transfer equation contains a correction factor whose magnitude depends exponentially on a quantity that we call the coherent optical depth. We compute that many-body effects affect line radiative transfer of strongly emitting and astronomically ubiquitous radio- and submillimeter lines, such…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpectroscopy and Laser Applications · Laser-induced spectroscopy and plasma · Atmospheric and Environmental Gas Dynamics
