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The Emission Line Project:
Benchmarking the Plasma Spectral
Emission Codes
Nancy S. Brickhouse
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory
Chandra X-ray Observatory Center
With Jeremy Drake
Chandra Users Committee Meeting
Center for Astrophysics
June 16, 1999
I. Introduction
-
- The Emission Line Project is a collaborative effort, organized by the
Chandra X-ray Observatory Center, to improve the
plasma spectral models used to analyze and fit X-ray spectral
observations.
-
- The first phase will take advantage of high quality spectra of
three stellar coronal targets (Procyon, Capella, and HR 1099) that
will be obtained for the purposes of calibrating the Chandra
transmission gratings.
-
- Calibration sources:
- Cover a large range in plasma temperature
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- Procyon (F5 IV); log T
6.3
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- Capella (G1 III + G8 III); log T
6.8
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- HR 1099 (K1 IV + G5 V); log T
7.2
- Well-observed, (reasonably) well-understood
- Emission line-rich spectra
-
- These calibration data will be made public as soon as possible
after their acquisition.
II. Overview of Plasma Spectral Emission Codes
III. Critical Evaluation of Atomic Data
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- These data are mostly theoretical. Very few
experimental measurements have been made, esp. for higher Z and charge.
-
- Wavelengths may be as inaccurate as a few %.
-
- Ionization and recombination rates may be worse than factors of
2.
-
- Example: Dielectronic recombination rate coefficients
-
- Collisional excitation rates are claimed accurate to 10 to 30
%.
-
- Example: H-like collision strengths
-
- Processes that are left out are expected not to matter very much.
-
- Example: Lines emission from high n
-
- The accuracy and completeness of data needed depends on what you are
trying to do.
-
- Ironically, the standards for lower resolution spectral analysis may
be higher than for grating spectroscopy, e.g. to determine
abundances with ACIS.
IV. Why Other Benchmarks Are Not Enough
-
- Theorists' opinions
-
- Based on agreement among different methods
-
- Laboratory plasma physics experiments
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- e.g. Tokamaks have transport/diffusion issues
-
- Solar spectra
-
- Inadequate resolution or bandpass
-
- Poor calibration
-
- High background
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- Limited to lower temperatures for quiet corona,
time-variability for higher temperatures (flares)
-
- Difficult to access old data sets, while original
identifications not complete or accurate
-
- Example: Global Fitting Analysis of SMM flare spectra with
MEKAL
Best-fit
(Phillips et al. 1999)
-
- Laboratory atomic physics experiments
-
- Great for wavelengths and identifications
-
- Limited to benchmarks for other atomic data
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- Example: resonance structure in collision strengths
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- Example: Maxwellian vs monoenergetic beam (EBIT)
V. Utility of Chandra Spectra
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The ``coronal approximation'' is a good first assumption.
-
- Emission is naturally weighted to high density regions where
collisional processes will be more equilibrated.
-
- Provides ``easy'' predictive capability with which to test
observed spectra.
-
- Breakdown of classical assumptions have predictable
consequences.
- Broad-band imaging spectral coverage records large wavelength
range simultaneously
- Well-calibrated spectrometers
- Sufficiently high spectral resolution to avoid catastrophic
blending
VI. ELP Functional Activities
- Expedite and facilitate collaborative investigations of issues related
to atomic data and spectral models based on Chandra
calibration/ELP spectra.
- WWW distribution, collection, organization of data, information,
software
- Primary ELP Products
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- Chandra observations of Procyon, Capella, HR 1099
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- Raw data; pipeline products; flux-calibrated spectra; relevant
calibration products/quantities; uncertainties; problems list;
``unofficial'' updates
-
- Line Catalog consisting of measured wavelengths, fluxes, FWHM,
identifications
-
- Benchmarks: comparison of observed line flux ratios with
predictions from existing atomic theory (branching ratios, relative
level populations from rate matrix solution)
- Associated ELP Products
- Source models; benchmarks for ionization equilibrium
- Tests of coronal equilibrium; Maxwellian velocity distributions;
negligible optical depth
- Tests of completeness of existing line lists and spectral models
- Organizational/logistical Support
- Bring together atomic physics and astrophysics communities
- Coordinate collaborations involving different groups
- Disseminate relevant results, both atomic physics and
astrophysics
- Maintain a bibliography of relevant literature
VII. Opportunities for Participation and Involvement
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Nancy Brickhouse
1999-06-16