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11.3: Theory of the Curve of Growth

  • Page ID
    6715
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    Let us think again of our homogeneous slab of gas in front of a continuum source. Let \(I_\lambda (\text{c})\) be the radiance per unit wavelength interval of the continuum at wavelength \(\lambda \). Let \(\tau (x)\) be the optical thickness in the vicinity of a line and \(x = \lambda − \lambda_0\). If the slab is of thickness \(D\), the emergent radiance per unit wavelength as a function of wavelength will be

    \[I_\lambda (x)=I_\lambda(\text{c})\text{exp}[-\tau (x)].\label{11.3.1}\]

    The equivalent width \(W\) is given by

    \[\label{11.3.2}WI_\lambda(\text{c})=\int_{-\infty}^\infty \left ( I_\lambda(\text{c})-I_\lambda(x)\right )\,dx,\]

    or, by making use of Equation \ref{11.3.1},

    \[\label{11.3.3}W=\int_{-\infty}^\infty \left [ 1-\text{exp}\left \{-\tau(x)\right \} \right ]\,dx.\]

    If the line is symmetric, this may be evaluated as

    \[\label{11.3.4} W=2\int_0^\infty \left [ 1-\text{exp}\left \{-\tau(x)\right \} \right ]\,dx.\]

    In former days, gallant efforts were made to find, using various approximations in the different regimes of the curve of growth, algebraic expressions for evaluating this integral. The availability of modern computers enables us to carry out the integration numerically.


    This page titled 11.3: Theory of the Curve of Growth is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Jeremy Tatum via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.