Central flashes during stellar occultations. Effects of diffraction, interferences, and stellar diameter
Bruno Sicardy, Luc Dettwiller

TL;DR
This paper models the diffraction effects on central flashes during stellar occultations, revealing how atmospheric density, stellar diameter, and wavelength influence the flash's shape and intensity, with implications for planetary atmosphere studies.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive theoretical framework for understanding diffraction effects on central flashes, including new formulas for different atmospheric conditions and stellar sizes.
Findings
Central flash shape resembles a Poisson spot with increased height.
Diffraction effects are significant at millimeter wavelengths and longer.
High central flash heights observed during Pluto and Triton occultations.
Abstract
Central flashes occur during stellar occultations by solar system objects. We catalog diffraction effects on the flash with point-like stars, monochromatic waves and spherical transparent atmosphere. Diffraction involves the Huygens principle, the Sommerfeld lemma and the stationary phase method, while finite stellar diameter cases involve Clausius' theorem. For point-like stars, the central flash shape is that of the classical Poisson spot, but with larger height. For tenuous atmospheres that cannot focus the stellar rays at shadow center, the flash is amplified by the factor (R_0/r_0)^2 compared to the Poisson spot, where R0 and r0 are the object and the shadow radii, respectively. For denser atmospheres that can focus the rays at shadow center, the flash peaks at 2[(pi*R/lambda_F})^2]*phi0, where R is the central flash layer radius, lambda_F is the Fresnel scale and phi0 is the flux…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
