Computation of Collision-Induced Absorption by dense Hydrogen-Helium gas mixtures up to Thousands of Kelvin, for Astrophysical Applications
ORAL
Abstract
The interaction-induced absorption by collisional pairs of H$_{2}$ molecules is an important opacity source in the atmospheres of the outer planets and cool stars. The emission spectra of cool white dwarf stars differ significantly in the infrared from the expected blackbody spectra of their cores, which is largely due to absorption by collisional H$_{2}$--H$_{2}$, H$_{2}$--He, and H$_{2}$--H complexes in the stellar atmospheres. Using quantum-chemical methods we compute the atmospheric absorption from hundreds to thousands of kelvin, as required, for example, in astrophysical analyses of objects, including cool white dwarf stars, brown dwarf stars, M dwarfs, cool main sequence stars, solar and extra-solar planets, and the formation of so-called first stars [1]. Comparisons of our calculations with laboratory measurements, which exist only at room temperature and below, show close agreement. \\[4pt] [1] Martin Abel, Lothar Frommhold, Xiaoping Li, and Katharine L. C. Hunt, ``Collision-Induced Absorption by H$_{2}$ pairs: From Hundreds to Thousands of Kelvin,'' J. Phys. A, 2011, 115 (25), pp 6805-6812
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Authors
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Martin Abel
The University of Texas at Austin
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Lothar Frommhold
The University of Texas at Austin
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Xiaoping Li
Michigan State University
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Katharine L.C. Hunt
Michigan State University