Fraunhofer lines
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Image:High Resolution Solar Spectrum.jpg In physics and optics, the Fraunhofer lines are a set of spectral lines named for the German physicist Joseph von Fraunhofer (1787--1826). The lines were originally observed as dark features in the optical spectrum of the Sun.
The English chemist William Hyde Wollaston was in 1802 the first person to note the appearance of a number of dark features in the solar spectrum. In 1814, Fraunhofer independently rediscovered the lines and began a systematic study and careful measurement of the wavelength of these features. In all, he mapped over 570 lines, and designated the principal features with the letters A through K, and weaker lines with other letters.
It was later discovered by Kirchoff and Bunsen that each chemical element was associated with a set of spectral lines, and deduced that the dark lines in the solar spectrum were caused by absorption by those elements in the upper layers of the sun. Some of the observed features are also caused by absorption in oxygen molecules in the Earth's atmosphere.
The major Fraunhofer lines, and the elements they are associated with, are shown in the following table:
Designation | Element | Wavelength (nm) | Designation | Element | Wavelength (nm) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
y | O2 | 898.765 | c | Fe | 495.761 | |
Z | O2 | 822.696 | F | H β | 486.134 | |
A | O2 | 759.370 | d | Fe | 466.814 | |
B | O2 | 686.719 | e | Fe | 438.355 | |
C | H α | 656.281 | G' | H γ | 434.047 | |
a | O2 | 627.661 | G | Fe | 430.790 | |
D1 | Na | 589.592 | G | Ca | 430.774 | |
D2 | Na | 588.995 | h | H δ | 410.175 | |
D3 (or d) | He | 587.565 | H | Ca+ | 396.847 | |
E2 | Fe | 527.039 | K | Ca+ | 393.368 | |
b1 | Mg | 518.362 | L | Fe | 382.044 | |
b2 | Mg | 517.270 | N | Fe | 358.121 | |
b3 | Fe | 516.891 | P | Ti+ | 336.112 | |
b4 | Fe | 516.751 | T | Fe | 302.108 | |
b4 | Mg | 516.733 | t | Ni | 299.444 |
The Fraunhofer C-, F-, G'-, and h- lines correspond to the alpha, beta, gamma and delta lines of the Balmer series of emission lines of the hydrogen atom. The D1 and D2 lines form the well-known "sodium doublet", the centre wavelength of which (589.29 nm) is given the designation letter "D".
Note that there is disagreement in the literature for some line designations; e.g., the Fraunhofer "d" line may refer to the cyan iron line at 466.814 nm, or alternatively to the yellow helium line (also labelled D3) at 587.565 nm.
Because of their well defined wavelengths, Fraunhofer lines are often used to characterize the refractive index and dispersion properties of optical materials.
See also
nl:Fraunhoferlijnen pt:Espectro de Fraunhofer ja:フラウンホーファー線 pl:linie Fraunhofera sv:Fraunhoferska linjerna