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Part One - Preparing the Way

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 June 2020

Peter Joseph Rayer
Affiliation:
The Meteorological Office, UK
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Summary

A brief overview is given of many topics that are covered later, followed by a detailed plan of the book. The concern is with interactions that take place between molecular dipoles in an equilibrium gas when probed by an externally sourced electromagnetic wave train. This will lead to the appearance of otherwise sharp spectral lines that may be broadened in various ways. After a brief mention of the early ideas of Lorentz and Weisskopf, the discussion moves to the real starting point for this book, which is the idea that the line shape will be determined by the fluctuating response of the active dipole to molecular collisions. Three broadening effects are distinguished. Firstly, an elastic collision at the radiating molecule may cause a sudden change in the phase of the wave train. Secondly, where an elastic collision exerts a torque on the radiator, there may be an elastic reorientation and a sudden change in the wave train amplitude. Thirdly, an inelastic collision may lead to a sudden change in the frequency of the wave train, and, if these collisions are frequent enough, there may also be interference, or coupling, between the lines as they are broadened.

Type
Chapter
Information
Pressure Broadening of Spectral Lines
The Theory of Line Shape in Atmospheric Physics
, pp. 1 - 2
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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