A&A 389, 213-227 (2002)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20020517
Non-LTE line transfer with spatially correlated turbulence: Fluctuation against average emergent radiation field
M. L. Loucif1, 2 and L. Ben Jaffel21 Observatoire d'Alger, CRAAG, BP 63, Bouzareah-Alger, Algeria
2 Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris - CNRS, 98bis Bld. Arago, 75014 Paris, France
e-mail: loucif@iap.fr; bjaffel@iap.fr
(Received 1 March 2000 / Accepted 3 April 2002 )
Abstract
The increasing interest in using turbulence to explain anomalies observed in stellar spectral lines is discussed.
This turbulence occurs at a finite spatial scale, a key parameter. In our previous work on non-LTE radiation
transfer in the presence of a turbulent velocity field (Loucif & Magnan 1982), we calculated individual profiles representing
intensity fluctuations around the averaged line shape for photon diffusion with complete redistribution in frequency (CFR),
a function well-adapted to media where collisional excitations dominate. We now generalize the problem by accounting for partial
redistribution in frequency (PFR). To show the effect of the spatial correlation in the velocity field on the emergent line
profiles as well as the importance of fluctuations in the medium's optical properties against the average, exhaustive calculations
of emergent non-LTE line profiles are performed in the frame of a systematic comparison between the two processes of redistribution
for the three following cases: static medium, averaged turbulent medium, and deviation from the average. In all cases, we
confirm the differences and similarities in CFR and PFR descriptions previously derived for static media. These results seem
reasonable since light scattering occurs at the atomic level-a scale well below the macroscopic size of the turbulence scale
length. In addition, pronounced differences in the emergent radiation field are obtained between the average case and the
so-called deviation from average for both frequency redistribution functions. These systematic differences rule out classical
treatment of line formation in turbulent fields that assume averaged media to model observations obtained over an exposure
time shorter than the turbulent field time scale (
). Beyond the different assumptions made to describe the non-LTE line formation in a turbulent medium, our model provides
a simple and coherent description of realistic media applicable to different astrophysical observational backgrounds. For
this purpose, a unified picture is proposed for the radiation field formation, invoking mainly the medium opacity, the turbulence
correlation length, and the velocity. Observations of variable objects, or along extended lines of sights, allowing a high
probability for such deviations to occur (e.g., quasars), are suitable for application of our model.
Key words: line: formation -- line: profiles -- radiative transfer -- turbulence -- ISM: abundances -- stars: emission line, Be
© ESO 2002
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