1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics...

31
1 Laurence S. Rothman Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres of extrasolar planets Paris, FRANCE 19-21 Novembre 2008 Spectroscopic Parameters Spectroscopic Parameters for the Atmospheres of for the Atmospheres of Extrasolar Planets Extrasolar Planets

Transcript of 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics...

Page 1: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

1

Laurence S. RothmanLaurence S. RothmanHarvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics

Atomic and Molecular Physics Division

Cambridge MA 02138, USAMolecules in the atmospheres

of extrasolar planetsParis, FRANCE

19-21 Novembre 2008

Spectroscopic ParametersSpectroscopic Parametersfor the Atmospheres offor the Atmospheres of

Extrasolar PlanetsExtrasolar Planets

Page 2: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

2

PASTPAST

Page 3: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

3

Page 4: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

4

Page 5: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

5

Jean Baptiste Joseph FourierMarch 21, 1768 – May 16, 1830

1824 ► Greenhouse effect- gases in the atmosphere increase the surface temperature of the Earth - Planets lose energy by infrared radiation(that Fourier called "chaleur obscure" or "dark heat") - Fourier transform spectroscopy (FTS)

Page 6: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

6

Joseph-Marie Jacquard – 1801Charles Babbage ~ 1820HITRAN – 1973Florida - 2000

Page 7: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

7

HITRAN law?

Page 8: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

8

PRESENTPRESENT

Page 9: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

9

96 (2005) 139-204

Page 10: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

10Level 3

Level 2

JavaHAWKS Software Installers and DocumentationLevel 1

File Structure of HITRAN CompilationFile Structure of HITRAN Compilation

Line-by-line

Molecule-by-molecule

Global Data Files, Tables,

and References

Supplemental

Supplemental

Cross-sections

Alternate

HITRAN(line-transition

parameters)

IRCross-

sections

AerosolRefractive

Indices

LineCoupling

CO2 data

UV

Page 11: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

11

HITRAN Line-by-line ParametersHITRAN Line-by-line Parameters

160-character total160-character total

ParameterParameter Field sizeField size DefinitionDefinition

Mol I2 Molecule number

Iso I1 Isotopologue no.(1 = most abundant, 2 = second most abundant, …)

νif F12.6 Transition wavenumber in vacuum [cm-1]

Sif E10.3 Intensity [cm-1/(molecule∙cm-2) @ 296K]

Aif E10.3 Einstein A-coefficient [s-1]

γair F5.4 Air-broadened half-width (HWHM) [cm-1/atm @ 296K]

γself F5.4 Self-broadened half-width (HWHM) [cm-1/atm @ 296K]

E″ F10.4 Lower-state energy [cm-1]

nair F4.2 Temperature-dependence coefficient of γair

δair F8.6 Air pressure-induced shift [cm-1/atm @ 296K]

v′, v″ 2A15 Upper and Lower “global” quanta

q′, q″ 2A15 Upper and Lower “local” quanta

ierr 6I1 Uncertainty indices for νif , Sif , γair , γself , nair , δair

iref 6I2 Reference pointers for νif , Sif , γair , γself , nair , δair

* A1 Flag for line-coupling algorithm

g′, g″ 2F7.1 Upper and Lower statistical weights

Page 12: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

12

Page 13: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

13

Some New UpdatesSome New UpdatesH2O – water

►Reassignment of visible spectra [Tennyson et al]► Update of γself [Gamache et al] ► Implement IUPAC results [Tennyson et al]

CO2 – carbon dioxide

► OCO line list for near IR [Brown, Miller et al]► CDSD [Tashkun et al]► Weak bands [Campargue et al]

► New 0 to 4800 cm-1 [Brown et al] ► CH3D 3300-3700 cm-1 [Brown et al]► Line-shape calculations, supplemented with exp.

CH4 – methane

Page 14: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

14

G

lob

al f

it

new

1.7 μm

2.3 μm

Methane ChallengeMethane Challenge

Page 15: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

15

O3 – Ozone

► Major update 1632-5870 cm-1 [Reims/Tomsk]► Improved line-shape algorithm

O2 – Oxygen

► (UV) Corrected Schumann-Runge list► Added Herzberg bands► Improved A-band [Brown and co-workers]

More New Updates…..More New Updates…..

HNO3 – nitric acid

► Update 600-1790 cm-1 [Perrin et al]► Further Improvements in 11-µm region [Gomez et al]

Page 16: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

16

Species Currently Covered (line-by-line portion)Species Currently Covered (line-by-line portion)

Molecule# of isotopo-

logues Molecule# of isotopo-

logues Molecule# of isotopo-

logues

H2O 6 HCl 2 COF2 1

CO2 8 HBr 2 SF6 1

O3 5 HI 1 H2S 3

N2O 5 ClO 2 HCOOH 1

CO 6 OCS 5 HO2 1

CH4 3 H2CO 3 O 1

O2 3 HOCl 2 ClON2O 2

NO 3 N2 1 NO+ 1

SO2 2 HCN 3 HOBr 2

NO2 1 CH3Cl 2 C2H4 2

NH3 2 H2O2 1 CH3OH 1

HNO3 1 C2H2 2 CH3Br 2

OH 3 C2H6 1 CH3CN 1

HF 1 PH3 1 CF4 197 Isotopologues97 Isotopologues

Page 17: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

17

Species Currently Covered (IR Cross-sections)Species Currently Covered (IR Cross-sections)Molecule Name Molecule Name

SF6 Sulfur hexafluoride CHClFCF3 HCFC-124

ClON2O Chlorine nitrate CH3CCl2F HCFC-141b

CCl4 Carbon Tetrachloride CH3CClF2 HCFC-142b

N2O5 Dinitrogen pentoxide CHCl2CF2CF3 HCFC-225ca

HNO4 Peroxynitric acid CClF2CF2CHClF HCFC-225cb

C2F6 CFC-116 CH2F2 HFC-32

CCl3F CFC-11 CHF2CF3 HFC-125

CCl2F2 CFC-12 CHF2CHF2 HFC-134

CClF3 CFC-13 CFH2CF3 HFC-134a

CF4 CFC-14 CF3CH3 HFC-143a

C2Cl2F3 CFC-113 CH3CHF2 HFC-152a

C2Cl2F4 CFC-114 SF5CF3

Trifluoromethyl sulfur pentafluoride

C2ClF5 CFC-115 CH3C(O)OONO2 PAN

CHCl2F HCFC-21 CH3CN Methyl cyanide

CHClF2 HCFC-22 C6H6 Benzene

CHCl2CF3 HCFC-123

Page 18: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

18

IUPAC Water-Vapor TaskIUPAC Water-Vapor Task

• Collect all kinds of original information about the high-resolution spectroscopy of the water molecule

Distributed Information System

• Provide active storage of these data and related metadata

• Deliver information to users in different forms via the Internet

Page 19: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

19

IUPAC vs HITRANRo-vibrational levels

for H217O

Page 20: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

20

H I T E M PH I T E M P

HITRANHITRAN

Intersection des Banques de Données Intersection des Banques de Données HITRAN et HITEMPHITRAN et HITEMP

Page 21: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

21

HITRAN vs HITEMP COHITRAN vs HITEMP CO22

• 250 ppm CO2

• 5-meter source• 100 feet above the surface

HITEMP vs HITRAN CO2 1000 K

0.00E+005.00E-051.00E-041.50E-042.00E-042.50E-043.00E-04

2100 2200 2300 2400Wavenumber

Rad

ian

ce

HITEMP

HITRAN

HITEMP vs HITRAN CO2 1500 K

0.00E+00

2.00E-04

4.00E-04

6.00E-04

8.00E-04

2100 2200 2300 2400

Wavenumber

Rad

ian

ce

HITEMP

HITRAN

HITEMP vs HITRAN CO2 1000 K

0.00E+00

2.00E-06

4.00E-06

6.00E-06

8.00E-06

3300 3400 3500 3600

Wavenumber

Rad

ian

ce

HITEMP

HITRAN

HITEMP vs HITRAN CO2 1500 K

0.00E+00

5.00E-06

1.00E-05

1.50E-05

2.00E-05

3300 3400 3500 3600

Wavenumber

Rad

ian

ce

HITEMP

HITRAN

Page 22: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

22

Comparison of CDSD and old HITEMP with MeasurementsComparison of CDSD and old HITEMP with Measurements

Page 23: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

23

HITEMPHITEMP

• Line-absorption parameters in HITRAN format

• Constituents- Water Vapor: 0 to 25000 cm-1 @ 1000K,1500K

- Carbon Dioxide: 400 to 10000 cm-1 @ 1000K

- Carbon Monoxide: 0 to 10000 cm-1 @ solar temperature

- Hydroxyl Radical: 0 to 19300 cm-1 @NLTE

Page 24: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

24

New HITEMP Water List Assembly

Convert to HITRAN2004 format

Combination of BT2, high-temperature experiments, and HITRAN

HITEMPWater Line List

List created using BT2 database- for principal isotopologue, created at 296Kwith lines that have significant intensity at

4000K, J <50

Partition Function

Experimental high-temperature line positions- Based on quantum numbers, replace frequencies with experimental ones (when available)

HITRANdatabase

Einstein A-coefficients,Statistical weights

Line-shape parameters(widths, shifts, etc)

Page 25: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

25

►More temperature-pressure sets of cross-sections (IR and UV)

►Improved database structure (IUPAC paradigm)

►High-temperature parameters (HITEMP)

►Molecules for astrophysics applications

►Refined line-shape parameters

►Additional line-mixing algorithms

►Collision-Induced Absorption bands

Improvements and Enhancements to Improvements and Enhancements to thethe CompilationCompilation being consideredbeing considered

Page 26: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

26

AccessAccess

web site: http://cfa.harvard.edu/HITRAN

- Gives instructions for accessing compilation (free)- Updates- Documentation- Links to related databases- HITRAN facts- Related conferences

Page 27: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

27

JavaHAWKSJavaHAWKS JavaJava version of HHITRAN AAtmospheric WWorKSKStation

• Functions to manipulate and filter the HITRAN andassociated molecular spectroscopic databases

• Internet access to HITRAN and other related databases

• Links to abstracts that are the sources forHITRAN parameters

• Access to archival HITRAN documentation

• Plotting of line-by-line files and cross-section files

Page 28: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

28

Some Sources of ErrorsSome Sources of Errorsin the HITRAN Databasein the HITRAN Database

• Measurement– Calibration– Resolution– Photometric accuracy– Pressure, temperature, stability, …– Methods of analysis– Identification of lines

• Theory– Perturbations– Line shapes– Lack of convergence– Limit of basis sets

• Units• Transcription

Page 29: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

29

HITRANHITRAN International Advisory Committee International Advisory Committee

Page 30: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

30

CC

lF3

(CF

C-1

3)C

Cl 2

F2

(CF

C-1

2)C

F4

(CF

C-1

4)

SF

6

Typical Cross-section filesTypical Cross-section files

Page 31: 1 Laurence S. Rothman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Atomic and Molecular Physics Division Cambridge MA 02138, USA Molecules in the atmospheres.

31

Figure 1. Comparison of different theoretical line lists with high-temperature experiments

Comparison of different theoretical line listsComparison of different theoretical line listswith high-temperature observationwith high-temperature observation