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Non-Local Thermodynamic Equilibrium By: Christian Johnson
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Basic Outline Introduction Spectral Line Formation Non-LTE Effects Atmospheric Inhomogeneities Effects On Stellar Abundances Summary
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Introduction Model atmospheres and input parameters often limit abundance measurement accuracy NLTE effects mostly unknown for low mass end (M stars and below); flux mostly carried via convection NLTE effects for the hottest stars (A-type and above) are more well known; photospheric flux carried by intense radiation field (e.g., review by Hubeny, Mihalas, & Werner 2003) Most F-K stellar abundances employ 1D, hydrostatic LTE models for atmospheres and line formation mechanisms
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Spectral Line Formation What is meant by NLTE? DEPARTURES FROM STATISTICAL EQUILIBRIUM! Radiation fields or level populations do NOT vary with time P ij =A ij +B ij J υ +C ij A ij =Radiative Emission B ij =Radiative Absorption/Stimulated Emission C ij =Collisional Excitation/De-excitation
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Spectral Line Formation Problem? Coupled level populations depend on the radiation field …which depends on the populations Everything depends on everything else, everywhere else! Solution: solve rate equations simultaneously with radiative transfer equation at all relevant frequencies Compare to LTE: local gas temperature gives excitation populations and ionization via Boltzmann and Saha equations Caution: major assumption in NLTE codes…LTE departures do NOT feedback into the model atmosphere! Problem for opacity contributors and electron donors? (think low I.P. metals)
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Spectral Line Formation Important NLTE contributors: e - collisions with (1) other e - and (2) neutral H Estimates of n H /n e given by classical Drawin (1968, 1969) and van Regemorter (1962) formulae What does this suggest? Collisions with neutral H may dominate the collision rates in metal-poor stars (1) ignore them (2) use Darwin formula as is (classical) (3) apply scaling factor S H Important: LTE is NOT a middle ground and often falls on either end of NLTE calculations
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NLTE Effects Line formation in atmospheres is intrinsically out of equilibrium due to nonlocality of radiative transfer Line strength can differ from LTE in two ways: (1) line opacity has changed (2) line source function departs from the Planck function
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NLTE Effects: Resonance Scattering In strong lines, only relevant formation process is the line itself Outward photon losses cause J υ <B υ Pronounced when scattering dominates over absorption Line becomes stronger in NLTE Resonance scattering not important when continuum processes dominate O I Triplet LTE NLTE
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NLTE Effects: Overionization If J υ >B υ with radiative bound-free transitions, photoionization rates will exceed LTE values Ions in minority stage will thus be “overionized” This can weaken the lines significantly by changing the line opacity Occurs more in the UV (B υ drops faster than J υ with height) and metal-poor stars (larger ionizing radiation field for a given height) τ=01D, MARCS
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NLTE Effects: Photon Pumping Bound-bound equivalent of overionization J υ -B υ excess in a transition overpopulates the upper level compared to LTE Weakens the line by increasing S υ Ex: B I resonance line
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NLTE Effects: Photon Suction Sequence of high probability, radiative bound- bound transitions from close to the ionization limit down to lower levels Combined photon losses can generate efficient flow of electrons downward Can lead to flow from primary ionization state to minority state (also causes an overionization) Na D Line LTE NLTE
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Atmospheric Inhomogeneities Convection seen in the photosphere as a pattern of broad, warm upflows surrounded by narrow, cool downdrafts
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Atmospheric Inhomogeneities When the ascending isentropic gas nears the surface, photons leak out→cooling→HI photoionization opacity decreases→more photons leaving→more cooling Causes rapid adjustment in a narrow atmospheric region for the Sun
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Atmospheric Inhomogeneities Integrated Line Profile T>T surf T<T surf Updraft Downdraft 3D Solar Model
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1D vs 3D Models Line strengths may differ between 1D and 3D for two reasons (1) different mean atmospheric structures and (2) the existence of atmospheric inhomogeneities [Fe/H]~0.0, the abundance of spectral lines generates sufficient radiative heating in optically thin layers so ~radiative equilibrium Lower [Fe/H], paucity of lines gives much weaker coupling between the radiation field and gas Near adiabatic cooling of upflowing material dominates over radiative heating and T considerably lower than rad. eq.
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1D vs 3D Models What problems does this cause? Differences between 3D and 1D models can be larger than 1000 K in optically thin layers (bad for abundance determinations) Steeper temperature gradients produce stronger J υ /B υ divergence→stronger NLTE effects
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Effects on Stellar Abundances: Carbon Aside from molecular bands, carbon abundances can be measured with the [C I] 8727 line or other high excitation (χ ex >7.5 eV) lines Easy, Right? Not really, [C I] is very weak, even in the Sun High E.P. lines have NLTE effects due to the source function falling below the local Planck function [C I]
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Effects on Stellar Abundances
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Effects on Stellar Abundances: Carbon In the metal-poor regime, only transitions from over-populated levels are available Combination of increased optical depth (lower opacity in those stars) and previously mentioned source function effect gives NLTE corrections of perhaps -0.40 dex This has important consequences for Carbon enrichment of the galaxy Onset of Type Ia SNe Rate C~Rate O Invoking Pop. III nucleosynthesis of C and O may be incorrect!
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Effects on Stellar Abundances: Nitrogen Disregarding NH and CN, Nitrogen only has a few high excitation lines available for analysis (χ ex >10 eV) NLTE departures similar to C I; near solar T eff, dominant effect is S υ /B υ <1 This comes from photons escaping, but at higher temperatures the NLTE driver is line opacity
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Effects on Stellar Abundances: Nitrogen Nitrogen abundances determined from NH can have NLTE corrections ranging up to almost -1 dex! This could drastically alter the view of galactic Nitrogen production and have an impact on many stellar interiors problems such as the CNO cycle and s-process neutron capture (N is a “neutron poison”)
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Effects on Stellar Abundances: Oxygen Notoriously difficult to obtain accurate abundances O I triplet at ~7770 Å likely not formed in LTE (seemingly proven by center-to-limb estimates) The departures are mostly due to photon losses, so at least a two level atom can be used S υ <B υ, so the line will be stronger in NLTE Center Limb
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Effects on Stellar Abundances: Light and Fe-Peak Elements Na I D resonance lines are quite strong in F-K stellar spectra Combination of resonance scattering and photon suction should cause a flow to Na II (always negative NLTE correction) However, Gratton et al. (1999) find for low metallicity giants, the correction should be positive Discrepancy is currently unknown
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Effects on Stellar Abundances: Light and Fe-Peak Elements Mg I has several optical lines available for analysis Photoionization cross sections for lower Mg I levels are large, which can cause substantial overionization; NLTE corrections of order +0.1-+0.2 Al also has a very large photoionization cross section in the ground state, making the situation conducive to significant overionization Corrections range from ~+0.1 for solar resonance lines to ~+0.8 at [Fe/H]<-1
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Effects on Stellar Abundances: Light and Fe-Peak Elements Granulation effects for these and other light elements not well studied LTE departures most pronounced in upflows Upflow radiation fields produce overionization; downflows cause photon suction Remember: integrated line profiles biased toward upflows
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Effects on Stellar Abundances: Light and Fe-Peak Elements Fe: ridiculous number of optical transitions available Important for tracing metallicity and is a key opacity constituent Fe I lines undoubtedly form in NLTE conditions; severity unknown Main cause: overionization
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Effects on Stellar Abundances: Light and Fe-Peak Elements Things to consider for Fe overionization: (1) Accurate photoionization cross sections important (2) Collisional coupling of Fe I to Fe II (3) Accurate estimate degree of thermalization by collision with electrons and hydrogen atoms (4) J υ /B υ excess dependent on steepness of temperature profile
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Effects on Stellar Abundances: Light and Fe-Peak Elements Fe II lines possibly immune from NLTE BUT, same process driving Fe I overionization causes photon pumping in UV resonance lines of Fe II However, Fe II corrections are likely only of order +0.05-+0.1 dex Fe I/II NLTE effects have significant impact on stellar abundance determination techniques [Fe/H]=0.0 [Fe/H]=-3.0
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Effects on Stellar Abundances: Neutron-Capture Elements Overall low abundance and low E.P. leads to most elements being measured in a dominant ionization stage Overionization typically not a problem But, only resonance or low E.P. subordinate lines strong enough for detection (especially in metal poor stars)…the latter being more T sensitive Not much work has been done, but given the fact that single resonance lines are quite often used, this could be a problem
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Summary NLTE work is vitally important to line formation and abundance determinations; but calculations are difficult and require accurate input physics LTE is good for comparison, but is rarely a middle ground NLTE corrections are highly dependent on atmospheric parameters, line formation mechanisms, and metallicity If some proposed corrections are valid, our view of the early universe and Pop. III stars may soon drastically change
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The End!
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