43rd Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
Volume 57, Number 5
Monday–Friday, June 4–8, 2012;
Orange County, California
Session G3: Invited Session: Line Broadening
8:00 AM–10:00 AM,
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Room: Grand Ballroom E
Chair: Arati Dasgupta, Naval Research Laboratory
Abstract ID: BAPS.2012.DAMOP.G3.1
Abstract: G3.00001 : Line Broadening in White Dwarf Photospheres
8:00 AM–8:30 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
D.E. Winget
(Department of Astronomy and McDonald Observatory, University of Texas)
White dwarfs are the simplest stars with the simplest surface chemical
compositions known. Spectroscopically we detect only hydrogen in surfaces of
the vast majority of these stars. The remainders are of various types,
including stars with surfaces of nearly pure helium and some apparently
massive stars with carbon and oxygen at the photosphere.
We will examine the potential offered by the white dwarf stars in the
context of both astrophysics and physics. This potential includes studying
cosmochronology--establishing the age and evolutionary history of our galaxy
and an independent lower limit on the age of the universe, constraining the
properties of axions and WIMPS in the context of dark matter models,
constraining dark energy by establishing the properties of the massive
progenitors of type Ia supernovae, studying nucleosynthesis from their
internal composition structure, and crystallization in dense Coulomb
plasmas, among many others.
Realizing this tremendous scientific potential depends on the determination
of two boundary conditions for each star: the surface gravity and effective
temperature. To do this, we must establish the photospheric plasma
conditions, density and temperature, using observations of the stellar
absorption spectra. Our understanding of line broadening appears to be an
obstacle, at present. We will discuss the evidence for past theoretical
inadequacies in line broadening theory and the hope for recent and future
calculations.
We will discuss how the experiments underway on the Z-facility at Sandia
National Laboratories --where we can create macroscopic uniform plasmas
under white dwarf photospheric conditions--will provide the benchmarks for
improving our understanding of line broadening under white dwarf
photospheric plasma conditions. These experiments will guide future theory
and improve our understanding of the white dwarf stars and, through them,
the contents and evolution of the cosmos.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2012.DAMOP.G3.1