A Time Efficient Experimental Approach to Catalogues for Astrophysics Frank C. De Lucia Ivan Medvedev Department of Physics Ohio State University Workshop.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
64th OSU International Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy June 22-26, 2009 José Luis Doménech Instituto de Estructura de la Materia 1 MEASUREMENT OF ROTATIONAL.
Advertisements

Yu. I. BARANOV and W. J. LAFFERTY Optical Technology Division Optical Technology Division National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg,
METO 621 Lesson 6. Absorption by gaseous species Particles in the atmosphere are absorbers of radiation. Absorption is inherently a quantum process. A.
Rotationally-resolved infrared spectroscopy of the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon pyrene (C 16 H 10 ) using a quantum cascade laser- based cavity ringdown.
THE PHYSICS, TECHNOLOGY, AND APPLICATIONS OF THE SUBMILLIMETER SPECTRAL REGION. Frank C. De Lucia Ohio State University Columbus, OH The scope of.
Analysis of an 18 O and D enhanced lab water spectrum using variational calculations of HD 18 O and D 2 18 O spectra Michael J Down - University College.
Gas Analysis by Fourier Transform Millimeter Wave Spectroscopy Brent J. Harris, Amanda L. Steber, Kevin K. Lehmann, and Brooks H. Pate Department of Chemistry.
Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy (AAS)
Submillimeter-wave Spectroscopy of 13 C 1 -Methyl formate [H 13 COOCH 3 ] in the Ground State Atsuko Maeda, Ivan Medvedev, Eric Herbst, Frank C. De Lucia,
Submillimeter-wave Spectroscopy of [HCOOCH 3 ] and [H 13 COOCH 3 ] in the Torsional Excited States Atsuko Maeda, Frank C. De Lucia, and Eric Herbst Department.
Lecture 3 INFRARED SPECTROMETRY
Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy
WH04 NUMERICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL ASPECTS OF DATA ACQUISITION AND PROCESSING IN APPLICATION TO TEMPERATURE RESOLVED 3-D SUB-MILLIMETER SPECTROSCOPY FOR ASTROPHYSICS.
IR EMISSION SPECTROSCOPY OF AMMONIA: LINELISTS AND ASSIGNMENTS. R. Hargreaves, P. F. Bernath Department of Chemistry, University of York, UK N. F. Zobov,
Physical and Chemical Tests 10-1 Purification: Chromatography Distillation Recrystallization Comparison to known compounds: Melting point Boiling point.
Weeds, Flowers, Clutter and a New Approach to Removing the Spectroscopic Bottleneck in Millimeter and Submillimeter Astrophysical Spectra - A Discussion.
Global analysis of broadband rotation and vibration-rotation spectra of sulfur dicyanide Zbigniew Kisiel, a Manfred Winnewisser, b Brenda P. Winnewisser,
IR/THz Double Resonance Spectroscopy in the Pressure Broadened Regime: A Path Towards Atmospheric Gas Sensing Sree H. Srikantaiah Dane J. Phillips Frank.

Hydroxyl Emission from Shock Waves in Interstellar Clouds Catherine Braiding.
The ground state rotational spectrum of methanol Rogier Braakman Chemistry & Chemical Engineering California Institute of Technology John C. Pearson Brian.
CSO BROADBAND MOLECULAR LINE SURVEYS I: BENCHMARKING GOBASIC ANALYSIS SOFTWARE Mary L. Radhuber, James L. Sanders III, Jacob C. Laas, Brian M. Hays, Susanna.
 a mathematical procedure developed by a French mathematician by the name of Fourier  converts complex waveforms into a combination of sine waves, which.
Emission Spectra of H 2 17 O and H 2 18 O from 320 to 2500 cm -1 Semen MIKHAILENKO 1, Georg MELLAU 2, and Vladimir TYUTEREV 3 1 Laboratory of Theoretical.
Millimeter Wave Spectrum of Iso-Propanol A. MAEDA, I. MEDVEDEV, E. HERBST and F. C. DE LUCIA Department of Physics, The Ohio State University.
Pressure Broadening and Spectral Overlap in the Millimeter Wave Spectrum of Ozone International Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy 65 th Meeting — June.
DEVELOPMENTS IN FAST SCAN SUBMILLIMETER SPECTROSCOPIC TECHNIQUE (FASSST) AND COMPUTER AIDED ASSIGNMENT OF ASYMMETRIC ROTOR SPECTRA (CAAARS) SOFTWARE SUITE.
Molecular Spectroscopy Symposium June 2011 TERAHERTZ SPECTROSCOPY OF HIGH K METHANOL TRANSITIONS John C. Pearson, Shanshan Yu, Harshal Gupta,
20 June st International Symposium on Molecular SpectroscopyPetkie – TG03-p1 The Millimeter and Submillimeter-wave Spectrum of the , 6 1.
Precision Measurement of CO 2 Hotband Transition at 4.3  m Using a Hot Cell PEI-LING LUO, JYUN-YU TIAN, HSHAN-CHEN CHEN, Institute of Photonics Technologies,
Introduction to Spectrochemical Methods
Weeding the Spectra [Preliminary Results with a new ‘Experimental’ Approach] Frank C. De Lucia Department of Physics Ohio State University USA May 5, 2008,
Atusko Maeda, Ivan Medvedev, Eric Herbst,
THZ/MM-WAVE SPECTROSCOPIC SENSORS, CATALOGS, AND UNCATALOGUED LINES IVAN MEDVEDEV Department of Physics, Wright State University, Dayton, OH, USA; CHRISTOPHER.
NASA ESTO ATIP Laser Sounder for Remotely Measuring Atmospheric CO 2 Concentrations 12/12/01 NASA Goddard - Laser Remote Sensing Branch 1 James B. Abshire,
Analysis of interactions between excited vibrational states in the FASSST rotational spectrum of S(CN) 2 Zbigniew Kisiel, Orest Dorosh Institute of Physics,
Spectral Line Surveys with the CSO Susanna L. Widicus Weaver, Department of Chemistry, Emory University Matthew Sumner, Frank Rice, Jonas Zmuidzinas, Department.
Determination of activity of 51 Cr source on gamma radiation measurements V.V.Gorbachev, V.N.Gavrin, T.V.Ibragimova, A.V.Kalikhov, Yu.M.Malyshkin,A.A.Shikhin.
3-D SUBMILLIMETER SPECTROSCOPY FOR ASTROPHYSICS AND SPECTRAL ASSIGNMENT SARA FORTMAN, CHRISTOPHER NEESE, IVAN R. MEDVEDEV, FRANK C. DE LUCIA, Department.
3-D SUBMILLIMETER SPECTROSCOPY FOR ASTROPHYSICS AND SPECTRAL ASSIGNMENT SARAH M. FORTMAN, IVAN R. MEDVEDEV, FRANK C. DE LUCIA, Department of Physics, The.
Experimental Measurements of Collisional Cross Sections and Rates at Astrophysical and Quantum Collisional Temperatures Frank C. De Lucia Department of.
Large Molecules in Astrophysics: Weeds or Flowers Frank C. De Lucia Department of Physics Ohio State University The Snyder Lectures Greenbank, West Virginia.
MW Spectroscopy of  -Alanine and a Search in Orion-KL Shiori Watanabe ( Kyoto Univ. JAPAN ), Satoshi Kubota, Kentarou Kawaguchi ( Okayama Univ. JAPAN.
The Infrared Spectrum of CH 5 + Revisited Kyle N. Crabtree, James N. Hodges, and Benjamin J. McCall.
The Analysis of Astrophysical ‘Weeds’ Using 3-D Submillimeter Spectroscopy SARAH M. FORTMAN, JAMES P. MCMILLAN, CHRISTOPHER F. NEESE, and FRANK C. DE LUCIA.
Daisuke Ando, * Susumu Kuma, ** Masaaki Tsubouchi,** and Takamasa Momose** *Kyoto University, JAPAN **The University of British Columbia, CANADA SPECTROSCOPY.
The Complete, Temperature Resolved Spectrum Of Methyl Formate Between 214 and 265 GHz JAMES P. MCMILLAN, SARAH M. FORTMAN, CHRISTOPHER F. NEESE, and FRANK.
T HE C OMPLETE, T EMPERATURE R ESOLVED E XPERIMENTAL S PECTRUM OF M ETHANOL B ETWEEN 560 AND 654 GH Z Sarah M. Fortman, Christopher F. Neese, and Frank.
Cavity Based Medium Resolution Spectroscopy Satyakumar Nagarajan, Frank C. De Lucia, Christopher Neese The 70 th International Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy.
1 The r 0 Structural Parameters of Equatorial Bromocyclobutane, Conformational Stability from Temperature Dependent Infrared Spectra of Xenon Solutions,
Submillimeter absorption spectroscopy in semiconductor manufacturing plasmas and comparison to theoretical models Yaser H. Helal, Christopher F. Neese,
Application of Sputtering Method to the Observation of Rotational Spectra of Metal-containing Molecules M.Tanimoto, E.Y.Okabayashi, F.Koto, T.Okabayashi.
FAST SCAN SUBMILLIMETER SPECTROSCOPIC TECHNIQUE (FASSST). IVAN R. MEDVEDEV, BRENDA P. WINNEWISSER, MANFRED WINNEWISSER, FRANK C. DE LUCIA, DOUGLAS T. PETKIE,
22 June st International Symposium on Molecular SpectroscopyPetkie – RE07-p1 The Rotational Spectrum of H 15 NO 3 : All States Below 1000 cm -1.
An Experimental Approach to the Prediction of Complete Millimeter and Submillimeter Spectra at Astrophysical Temperatures Ivan Medvedev and Frank C. De.
Millimeter-wave Rotational Spectrum of Deuterated Nitric Acid Rebecca A.H. Butler, Camren Coplan, Department of Physics, Pittsburg State University Doug.
SESAPS Terahertz Rotational Spectrum of the v5/2v9 Dyad of Nitric Acid * Paul Helminger, a Douglas T. Petkie, b Ivan Medvedev, b and Frank C. De.
TJ02 3-D SUBMILLIMETER SPECTROSCOPY OF ASTRONOMICAL `WEEDS‘ - EXPERIMENTAL AND THEORETICAL ASPECTS OF DATA PROCESSING AND CATALOGING –> TJ03 Ivan R. Medvedev,
Microwave Spectroscopy of the Excited Vibrational States of Methanol John Pearson, Adam Daly, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology,
Saturation Roi Levy. Motivation To show the deference between linear and non linear spectroscopy To understand how saturation spectroscopy is been applied.
ANH T. LE, GREGORY HALL, TREVOR SEARSa Division of Chemistry
Atmospheric Remote Sensing Via Infrared-Submillimeter Double Resonance
Chem. 133 – 3/14 Lecture.
Weeding the Astrophysical Garden Using Complete Experimental Spectra
The Near-IR Spectrum of CH3D
Really Basic Optics Instrument Sample Sample Prep Instrument Out put
An Analysis of the Rotation Spectrum of Acetonitrile (CH3CN) in Excited Vibrational States Christopher F. Neese, James McMillian, Sarah Fortman, Frank.
[Preliminary Results with a new ‘Experimental’ Approach]
SPECTROPHOTOMETRY Applied Chemistry.
Hot Cold Molecules: Collisions at Astrophysical Temperatures
Presentation transcript:

A Time Efficient Experimental Approach to Catalogues for Astrophysics Frank C. De Lucia Ivan Medvedev Department of Physics Ohio State University Workshop on Submillimeter and Far-Infrared Laboratory Spectroscopy in Support of Herschel, SOFIA, and ALMA October , 2006 Pasadena, CA

Integration of Bootstrap Predictive Quantum Models and Complete Experimental Measurement: A New Approach to the Spectroscopy Challenge 1. A time efficient solution to the astronomical weed problem based on the measurement of complete spectra at multiple temperatures 2. Review of ACS (Atlanta), ALMA (Denmark), Snyderfest (Greenbank) 3. Integration of Approaches -Measurement and predictions of frequencies -Measurement and predictions of intensities -Redundancy and errors -Catalogues for astronomers -Spectroscopic challenges and effort requirements

Where are we: -Astrophysically? -Spectroscopically? -Catalogues?

courtesy of J. Cernicharo 1 mm Survey of Orion with IRAM 30-m Telescope

courtesy of J. Cernicharo U-Lines in the IRAM Survey After 50 years of submillimeter spectroscopy: >5000 ‘U’ lines ~40% of total Most attributable to large molecules -Very large number of low lying states -Many have perturbations; we often analyze the portion of the spectrum that we can or have time to -In some lab spectra assign and fit ~10000 out of lines Baseline often confusion, not noise limited

How do We Spend Our Time and Effort in Traditional Submillimeter Spectroscopy The Bootstrap Model: Prediction (Infrared, quantum chemistry, etc... ) Use predictions to search for a few relatively low J, ground vibrational state lines; assign and measure them Run quantum mechanical analysis, make improved predictions Iterate the process Keep Bootstrap Going Until: Can predict all observable lines to experimental accuracy Enough to publish Run into lines that are hard to assign or fit (perturbations) Sometimes extend to excited vibrational states, other conformers, etc. The Rotational Community has been Good About Publishing Data Makes possible good catalogs based on all useful data But we need to have concern about citation count problems for young faculty

Non-Bootstrap Approach: Measure every line

FASSST Spectrum of the Classical Weed: Methyl Formate < 0.01 second of data

BUT! 1. We rarely measure intensities 2. Even if we did, we need to know them over the range of astronomical temperatures 3. Traditional bootstrap Quantum Mechanical models do this very well

Methyl Formate We spent a lot of time assigning these A and E ground state lines (which have % of the total intensity), and they don’t have much in the way of perturbations

Methanol

The Effect of Temperature on the Spectrum of CH 3 OH We need spectrum that is not just complete in frequency, but also in intensity at all temperatures Observed | Calculated

The Calculation of Line Frequencies and Intensities from Experimental Data

The total number density (chemistry and pressure issues). But, for an unassigned line, one does not know -The matrix element -The lower state energy -The partition function The large molecules of interest have many assigned lines => Form ratios of spectra at well defined temperatures and concentrations Absorption Coefficients What You Need to Know to Simulate Spectra at an Arbitrary Temperature T 3 without Spectral Assignment

Eliminate Astronomical ‘Weeds’ at T 3 from Laboratory Measurements at T 1 and T 2 Along the way, this procedure also yields catalogue data (1) Complete in line frequencies, and (2) Upper state energies and line intensities But it does not include quantum mechanical line assignments

Comparison of Energy Levels Calculated from Experimental and Quantum Calculations for SO 2

Propagation of Uncertainty (T 2 = 300 K) T 1 = 77 K ==>It is important to have a low temperature reference

Collisional Cooling for low T 2 Do we have rotational equilibrium and a well defined rotational temperature? Yes, and we can test. Do we have vibrational equilibrium and a well defined vibrational temperature? For the relatively low lying levels of interest, probably yes, but we can both optimize and test.

Propagation of Uncertainty (T 2 = 300 K) T 1 = 77 K ==>It is important to have a low temperature reference

A MOLECULAR LINE SURVEY OF ORION KL IN THE 350 MICRON BAND C. Comito, P. Schilke, T. G. Phillips, D. C. Lis, F. Motte, and D. Mehringer; Ap. J. S.S. 156, 127 (2005). Is it possible to recover astronomical molecular concentrations without individually observable lines? 1. Fit for individually identifiable ‘U’ lines and QM assigned lines. 2. Will fits to complete spectral libraries eliminate the background clutter? 3. Are there individually hidden, but collectively observable flowers in the astronomical garden? 4. Note the lineshape problems in the astrophysical spectrum - how big is this impact?

Model Integration for Accuracy and Surety Combined Model Quantum Model Experimental Model Line Frequencies Calculated Measured some lines all lines, interpolated all states extrapolated redundant model accuracy? Intensities Calculated Measured some lines all lines redundant, model accuracy? 1. Standard output (frequencies, transition moments and lower state energies) for catalogues 2. Redundant QM model guards against blunders in direct measurement 3. Measurement of all lines eliminates errors in extrapolated frequencies (especially for model challenged species) 4. Quantum Mechanical intensities provide cross check on reliability and accuracy of experimental intensities 5. Experimental intensities provide cross check for model errors in the QM models of complex spectra

Summary and Conclusions From experimental measurements at two temperatures T 1 and T 2, it is possible to calculate spectrum (with intensities) at an arbitrary T 3. For low T 3, a relatively low T 2 improves the accuracy of the calculated spectrum. Collisional cooling provides a general method for achieving this low T 2, with 77 K convenient and suitable for all but the lowest temperatures. FASSST is a means of obtaining the needed data rapidly and with chemical concentrations constant over the data collection period. It is realistic in a finite time to produce catalogs complete enough to account even for the quasi-continua that sets the confusion limit. In the limit of ‘complete’ spectroscopic knowledge, the confusion limit will probably be set by the unknowns associated with the complexity of the astrophysical conditions, but the high spatial resolution of large telescopes and modern arrays may reduce this complexity. With good telescope intensity calibration and high spatial resolution there is a good prospect to use a global fitting approach to detect larger molecules than commonly assumed. The path laid out has challenges, but they are small in comparison to other challenges that must be met to get maximum return on investment for $10 9 instruments

What Could Go Wrong? (In ‘Proposal Speak’: What are the challenges?) Spectroscopically? Accuracy of the spectroscopic intensities? Need to be as good as the S/N of astronomical spectrum Need chemical stability and low temperature reference for good intensities Astronomically (Flowers application)? Vibrational temperatures not same as Rotational temperatures Low lying vibrational states relax more rapidly - for some species there is considerable mixing How homogeneous is the astronomical region? Large arrays help a lot How good is the intensity calibration of the telescope? As we calibrate in lab, fit to known dense spectrum to calibrate telescope Even though not a linear problem, many of the ‘errors’ and inhomogeneities will cancel as well

Experimental Challenges Intensities Basic calibration scheme (e. g. mode steering relative to chopper) Standing waves that impact effective path length - variation scale will be on order of 100 MHz Saturation: detectors - molecules - Beers Law Linewidths: impact on modulation schemes, integrated vs peak absorption Efficient cooling and well defined temperatures Model Integration for calibration and checks

Consider two lines, one assigned and one unknown at two temperatures T 1 and T 2 Step 1: With Eqn. 1 for both the known and unknown line, we have two equations and two unknowns: 1. The number density and partition function ratio for the T 1 and T 2 lab measurements 2. The lower state energy of the unassigned line Step 2: Solve for the lower state energy of unassigned line Eqn. 1 Eqn. 2

Step 3: Form a ratio between the observed intensities of an assigned and unassigned line at T 1 Step 4: Combining with the lower state energy for the unassigned line from the previous Eqn. 2, provides the matrix element of the unassigned line Step 5: To predict ratios at T 3 of the known (assigned) reference line and unassigned line in the molecular cloud Eqn. 3 Eqn. 4

Methyl Formate

Methanol

Comparison of Energy Levels Calculated from Experimental and Quantum Calculations for SO 2

Spectra Calculated at 100 K and 200 K from Measurements at 423 K and 293 K

Interference fringes Spectrum InSb detector 1 InSb detector 2 Ring cavity: L~15 m Mylar beam splitter 1 Mylar beam splitter 2 High voltage power supply Slow wave structure sweeper Aluminum cell: length 6 m; diameter 15 cm Trigger channel /Triangular waveform channel Signal channel BWO Magnet Lens Filament voltage power supply Length ~60 cm Stepper motor Reference channel Lens Stainless steel rails Path of microwave radiation Preamplifier Frequency roll-off preamplifier Reference gas cell Glass rings used to suppress reflections Data acquisition system Computer FAst Scan Submillimeter Spectroscopic Technique (FASSST) spectrometer Measure Every Line

FASSST Attributes 1. Can record resolution elements/sec Freezes Source Frequency Drift 2. Can record entire spectrum in a few seconds Freezes Chemistry Changes 3. ‘Locally’ intensity measurement is flat to ~1% A basis for intensity measurement But to be astronomically ‘complete,’ we need intensities at other, typically lower temperatures

CH 3 F 77 K Rotational Temperatures in a Collisional Cooling Cell as a function of K-state: Experiment vs. Theory

Input and Processing Quantum Model Experimental Measure subset of lines of interest Measure all lines of interest Assign and fit frequencies via bootstrap Frequencies Does not require intensity measurement Intensities Does not require Requires known temperature well defined temperature known concentration constant concentration