Temperature Dependences of Mechanisms Responsible for the Water-Vapor Continuum Absorption

TBMG-18911

01/01/2014

Abstract
Content

The water-vapor continuum absorption plays an important role in the radiative balance in the Earth’s atmosphere. It has been experimentally shown that for ambient atmospheric conditions, the continuum absorption scales quadratically with the H2O number density and has a strong, negative temperature dependence (T dependence). Over the years, there have been three different theoretical mechanisms postulated: far-wings of allowed transition lines, water dimers, and collision-induced absorption. The first mechanism proposed was the accumulation of absorptions from the farwings of the strong allowed transition lines. Later, absorption by water dimers was proposed, and this mechanism provides a qualitative explanation for the continuum characters mentioned above. Despite the improvements in experimental data, at present there is no consensus on which mechanism is primarily responsible for the continuum absorption.

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Citation
"Temperature Dependences of Mechanisms Responsible for the Water-Vapor Continuum Absorption," Mobility Engineering, January 1, 2014.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Jan 1, 2014
Product Code
TBMG-18911
Content Type
Magazine Article
Language
English