Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5428986 | Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer | 2012 | 9 Pages |
Earlier studies on electron-ion recombination of Fe XVII, e+FeXVIIIâFeXVII, concentrated on low temperature region. However, due to its higher abundance, recombination in the high temperature region is of great importance. Total and level-specific recombination cross sections and rates of Fe XVII are presented from the detailed study in the high temperature. The calculations were carried out using the unified method which incorporates both the radiative recombination (RR) and dielectronic recombination (DR) including the interference effects. The method also yields self-consistent set of recombination rates and photoionization cross sections. Unified method is implemented through relativistic Breit-Pauli R-matrix (BPRM) method and close coupling (CC) approximation. For the details of the high energy and high temperature features a CC wave function expansion consisting of 60 levels from n=2 and 3 complexes of the core Fe XVIII was considered. Earlier study included core excitations to n=2 levels only. It is found that the resonances due to core excitations to n=3 levels are much more extensive and stronger than those to n=2 levels and increase the recombination considerably in the high temperature region. While earlier study of 3-level calculations agree very well with the experimentally derived low temperature recombination, the high temperature rate shows a broad peak at about 5Ã106K, near the maximum abundance of the ion, due to dominance of DR via PEC (photo-excitation-of-core) resonances of n=3 levels. Level-specific recombination rate coefficients, which include both the RR and DR, are presented for 454 levels (nâ¤10, lâ¤9, 0 â¤Jâ¤8 with even and odd parities) of Fe XVII. This is the first large-scale BPRM calculations for recombination of a complex atomic system beyond He- and Li-like ions. The results are expected to be accurate with 10-20% uncertainty and provide accurate modelings of ultraviolet to X-ray spectra.
⺠High temperature recombination of Fe XVII is important due to the ion abundance. ⺠The first detailed study of high-T recombination finds a DR peak at about 5M K. ⺠The level-specific recombination rates, presented up to n=10, show various DR bumps. ⺠The detailed features are explained through the inverse process of photoionization. ⺠The results cover a wide temperature range for all practical applications.