Abstract
The Hydrogen and Helium Pressure Broadening at Planetary Temperatures of the
183 and 380 GHz Transitions of Water Vapor
J. M. Dutta and C. R. Jones
Department of
Physics, North Carolina Central
University, Durham, North Carolina 27707
and
Thomas M. Goyette and Frank C. De Lucia
Department of Physics,
The Ohio State University, 174 W.
18th Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43210
The pressure broadening of the 33,3-22,0 and 41,4-32,1
transitions of water at 183 and 380 GHz, respectively, has been obtained
experimentally in the temperature region between 80 and 600 K using hydrogen (H2)
and helium (He) as broadening gases. This extends for the first time the
study of condensable gases in general and water in particular into the
temperature regime typical of the atmospheres of the outer planets. Above
250 K the measurements were taken in a conventional equilibrium cell. Low
temperature measurements were taken in a collisionally cooled cell which can
provide a laboratory environment very similar to that of the atmospheres of the
outer planets. For the lines broadened by He, data were found to fit to
the usual power law for the entire temperature range studied with resultant
temperature exponent n values of 0.49 ± 0.02 and 0.5 ± 0.03,
respectively. For the H-broadened lines the data above 150 K were found to
fit to the power law with resultant n values of 0.95 ± 0.07 and 0.85 ±
0.05, respectively. Below 150 K the H2 pressure broadening
parameters were measured to have smaller values than predicted by the relation.
The results are compared with earlier experimental and theoretical work.
For full paper:
Icarus, vol. 102, pp.
232-239, April 1993.
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