354
THE OUTSIDE OF A STAR
It has sometimes been urged against pressure broadening that we do not
get anything like so much broadening in a vacuum tube when the pressure
is equal to that now assigned to the reversing layer of a star. For example,
the Balmer series is quite sharp in a vacuum tube at a pressure of 10 -4
atmospheres. But this comparison overlooks the great difference due to
the ionisation of stellar material. The ion or electron is the centre of a
disturbing field of far wider extent than the neutral atom’s field which
can scarcely come into play except at collision; and the broadening effect
is of a much higher order of magnitude. Although ions and free electrons
are produced in a vacuum tube, their abundance is insignificant compared
with photospheric conditions.
As an example we consider the H p line of hydrogen which corresponds
to a transition between a 4-quantum and a 2-quantum orbit. In the
4-quantum orbit the period is 0-97.10~ 14 sec. The average duration of the
4-quantum state is about 10~ 8 sec. or 10 6 periods. Hence we should expect
the quantisation in this state to be sharp to about 1 part in a million.
Roughly speaking the purity of the H p line emitted or absorbed by un
disturbed atoms should correspond to the purity of the spectrum from a
grating with a million lines. This can be modified by the disturbance of
other atoms or electrons in two ways: (1) the average duration of the
excited state may be shortened by frequent collisions, (2) general irregular
disturbance may shorten the stretches over which the phase of the
periodicity is approximately preserved—just as the resolving power of
the grating is impaired (1) by reducing the number of lines, (2) by ir
regularity of ruling. Numerical calculation seems to indicate that in
photospheric conditions the process (2) is the more important. The problem
has been discussed by Russell and Stewart*.
Let a be the total number of electrons and (singly charged) ions per
cu. cm., and let r 0 be a length such that |7ror 0 3 = 1. Then if we draw a
sphere of radius r 0 round a given atom this sphere will on the average
contain one disturbing charge. The more distant charges will by their
imperfect symmetry also produce disturbing fields, but the order of
magnitude of the resultant field will be not very different from that due
to the nearest charge.
For singly ionised material at 10,000° and 10~ 4 atmospheres pressure,
we have CT =7-4.10 13 , r 0 = 1-48.10“ 5 cm.
The field due to a charge e at distance r 0 is
2T8 electrostatic units.
Since the nearest charge is within r 0 the average disturbing field will be
larger. Russell and Stewart calculate the average to be 2-7 times larger
* Astrophys. Journ. 59, p. 197 (1924).