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Model Atmosphere Results (Kurucz 1979, ApJS, 40, 1) Kurucz ATLAS LTE code Line Blanketing Models, Spectra Observational Diagnostics 1 ATLAS by Robert Kurucz (SAO) • Original paper and updated materials (kurucz.cfa.harvard.edu) have had huge impact on stellar astrophysics • LTE code that includes important continuum opacity sources plus a statistical method to deal with cumulative effects of line opacity (“line blanketing”) • Other codes summarized in Gray 2 ATLAS Grid • Teff = 5500 to 50000 K No cooler models since molecular opacities largely ignored. Models for Teff > 30000 K need non-LTE treatment (also in supergiants) • log g from main sequence to lower limit set by radiation pressure (see Fitzpatrick 1987, ApJ, 312, 596 for extensions) • Abundances 1, 1/10, 1/100 solar 3 Line Blanketing and Opacity Distribution Functions • Radiative terms depend on integrals • Rearrange opacity over interval: DF = fraction of interval with line opacity < ℓν • Same form even with many lines in the interval 4 ODF Assumptions • Line absorption coefficient has same shape with depth (probably OK) • Lines of different strength uniform over interval with near constant continuum opacity (select freq. regions carefully) 5 ODF Representation • DF as step functions • Pre-computed for grid over range in: temperature electron density abundance microturbulent velocity (range in line opacity) T = 9120 K 6 Line Opacity in Radiation Moments 7 Atmospheric Model Listings • Tables of physical and radiation quantities as a function of depth • All logarithms except T and 0 (c.g.s.) 8 9 Emergent Fluxes (+ Intensities) 10 11 Temperature Relation with Line Blanketing • With increased line opacity, emergent flux comes from higher in the atmosphere where gas is cooler in general; lower Iν, Jν • Radiative equilibrium: lower Jν → lower T J d S d B d • Result: surface cooling relative to models without line blanketing 12 Temperature Relation with Line Blanketing • To maintain total flux need to increase T in optically thick part to get same as gray case • H 1 1 B dT 3 T dz T3 • Result: backwarming 13 Flux Redistribution (UV→optical): opt. Fν ~ hotter unblanketed model 14 Temperature Relation with Convection • Convection: d ln T R adiabatic A d ln P radiative • Reduces T gradient in deeper layers of cool stars • F Frad Fconv 15 Geometric Depth Scale • dx d x i i 0 d • Physical extent large in low density cases (supergiants) 16 Observational Parameters • Colors: Johnson UBVRI, Strömgren ubvy (Lester et al. 1986, ApJS, 61, 509) • Balmer line profiles (Hα through Hδ) 17 Flux Distributions • Wien peak • Slope of Paschen continuum (3650-8205) • Lyman jump at 912 (n=1) Balmer jump at 3650 (n=2) Paschen jump at 8205 (n=3) • Strength of Balmer lines 18 19 20 H 912 He I 504 He II 227 21 22 Comparison to Vega 23 IDL Quick Look • IDL> kurucz,teff,logg,logab,wave,flam,fcont INPUT: • teff = effective temperature (K, grid value) • logg = log gravity (c.g.s, grid value) • logab = log abundance (0,-1,-2) OUTPUT: • wave = wavelength grid (Angstroms) • flam = flux with lines (erg cm-2 s-1 Angstrom-1) • fcont = flux without lines • IDL> plot,wave,flam,xrange=[3300,8000],xstyle=1 24 Limb Darkening Eddington-Barbier Relationship S=B(τ=0) S=B(τ=1) 25 How Deep Do We See At μ=1? Answer Depends on Opacity T(τ=1) low opacity T(τ=1) high opacity T(τ=0) Limb darkening depends on the contrast between B(T(τ=0)) and B(T(τ=1)) 26 Limb Darkening versus Teff and λ • Heyrovský 2007, ApJ, 656, 483, Fig.2 • u increases with lower λ, lower Teff • Both cases have lower opacity → see deeper, greater contrast between T at τ=0 and τ=1 Linear limb-darkening coefficient vs Teff for bands B (crosses), V (circles), R (plus signs), and I (triangles) 27