Bibcode
Bruls, J. H. M. J.; Trujillo Bueno, J.
Referencia bibliográfica
Solar Physics, Volume 164, Issue 1-2, pp. 155-168
Fecha de publicación:
3
1996
Revista
Número de citas
12
Número de citas referidas
10
Descripción
The polarization-free (POF) approximation (Trujillo Bueno and Landi
Degl'Innocenti, 1996) is capable of accounting for the approximate
influence of the magnetic field on the statistical equilibrium, without
actually solving the full Stokes vector radiative transfer equation. The
method introduces the Zeeman splitting or broadening of the line
absorption profile φI in the scalar radiative transfer equation,
but the coupling between Stokes I and the other Stokes parameters is
neglected. The expected influence of the magnetic field is largest for
strongly-split strong lines and the effect is greatly enhanced by
gradients in the magnetic field strength. Formally the interaction with
the other Stokes parameters may not be neglected for strongly-split
strong lines, but it turns out that the error in Stokes I obtained
through the POF approximation to a large extent cancels the neglect of
interaction with the other Stokes parameters, so that the resulting line
source functions and line opacities are more accurate than those
obtained with the field-free approach. Although its merits have so far
only been tested for a two-level atom, we apply the POF approximation to
multi-level non-LTE radiative transfer problems on the premise that
there is no essential difference between these two cases. Final
verification of its validity in multi-level cases still awaits the
completion of a non-LTE Stokes vector transfer code. For two realistic
multi-level cases (CaII and MgI in the solar atmosphere) it is
demonstrated that the POF method leads to small changes, with respect to
the field-free method, in the line source functions and emergent Stokes
vector profiles (much smaller than for a two-level atom). Real atoms are
dominated by strong ultraviolet lines (only weakly split) and continua,
and most lines with large magnetic splitting (in the red and the
infrared) are at higher excitation energies, i.e. they are relatively
weak and unable to produce significant changes in the statistical
equilibrium. We find that it is generally unpredictable by how much the
POF results will differ from the field-free results, so that it is
nearly always necessary to confirm predictions by actual computations.
The POF approximation provides more reliable results than the field-free
approximation without significantly complicating the radiative transfer
problem, i.e. without solving any extra equations and without excessive
computational resource requirements, so that it is to be preferred over
the field-free approximation.