Weakly Interacting Molecular Pairs: Unconventional Absorbers of Radiation in the Atmosphere NATO Science Series A Series presenting the results of scientific meetings supported under the NATO Science Programme. The Series is published by lOS Press, Amsterdam, and Kluwer Academic Publishers in conjunction with the NATO Scientific Affairs Division Sub-Series I. Life and Behavioural Sciences lOS Press II. Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry Kluwer Academic Publishers III. Computer and Systems Science lOS Press IV. Earth and Environmental Sciences Kluwer Academic Publishers V. Science and Technology Policy lOS Press The NATO Science Series continues the series of books published formerly as the NATO ASI Series. The NATO Science Programme offers support for collaboration in civil science between scientists of countries of the Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council. The types of scientific meeting generally supported are "Advanced Study Institutes" and "Advanced Research Workshops", although other types of meeting are supported from time to time. The NATO Science Series collects together the results of these mee tings. The meetings are co-organized bij scientists from NATO countries and scientists from NATO's Partner countries - countries of the CIS and Central and Eastern Europe. Advanced Study Institutes are high-level tutorial courses offering in-depth study of latest advances in a field. Advanced Research Workshops are expert meetings aimed at critical assessment of a field, and iden tification of directions for future action. As a consequence of the restructuring of the NATO Science Programme in 1999, the NATO Science Series has been re-organised and there are currently five sub-series as noted above. Please consult the following web sites for information on previous volumes published in the Series, as well as details of ear lier sub-series. http://www.nato.int/science http://www.wkap.nl http://www.iospress.nl http://www.wtv-books.de/nato-pco.htm I _f.1t\.L\ _ ~ Series IV: Earth and Environmental Sciences - Vol. 27 Weakly Interacting Molecular Pairs: Unconventional Absorbers of Radiation in the Atmosphere edited by Claude Camy-Peyret Universite Pierre et Marie Curie & CNRS, Paris, France and Andrei A. Vigasin Wave Research Center, General Physics Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia 1IrI... " Springer-Science+Susiness Media, S.v. Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Research Workshop on Weakly Interacting Molecular Pairs: Unconventional Absorbers of Radiation in the Atmosphere Fontevraud, France 29 April-3 May, 2002 A C.I.P. Catalogue record for this book is available from the Library of Congress. ISBN 978-1-4020-1596-0 ISBN 978-94-010-0025-3 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-94-010-0025-3 Printed on acid-free paper All Rights Reserved © 2003 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht Originally published by Kluwer Academic Publishers in 2003 Softcover reprint of the hardcover 1st edition 2003 No part of this work may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, microfilming, recording or otherwise, without written permission from the Publisher, with the exception of any material supplied specifically for the purpose of being entered and executed on a compu ter system, for exclusive use by the purchaser of the work. Contents Preface xi ContributingAuthors xv Part I THEORY SPECTRAOFTWO-ANDTHREE-BODY VANDERWAALSCOMPLEXES 3 M.Gustafsson, L.Frommhold 1 Introductoryremarks 3 2 Supramolecularproperties 4 3 Supramolecularspectra 8 BIMOLECULARABSORPTIONINATMOSPHERICGASES 23 A.A.Vigasin 1 Introduction 23 2 Statisticalmechanicsofinteractingmolecules 26 3 Howbimolecular statesshowupinabsorption 34 4 Conclusions 44 TRAJECTORYSTUDY OFCO2–ArANDCO2–HeCOLLISIONCOMPLEXES 49 S.V.Ivanov 1 Introduction 49 2 Classical trajectoryequationsforatom-diatom collision 50 3 Intermolecularinteractionpotential 53 4 Computationalprocedure 53 5 Resultsofsimulation 54 6 Conclusions 61 THEORETICALSTUDYOFINTERACTIONPOTENTIAL ANDPRESSUREBROADENINGOFSPECTRALLINES FORTHEHe–CH3FCOMPLEX 65 B.Bussery-Honvault, J.Boissoles,R.Moszynski VARIATIONALSOLUTIONOFANHARMONICVIBRATIONAL PROBLEMSFORPOLYATOMICSANDMOLECULARPAIRS 73 A.I.Pavlyuchko,B.S.Orlinson,A.A.Vigasin 1 Generaloutline 73 2 Casestudyofthecarbondioxidecomplexes 77 v vi WEAKLY INTERACTING MOLECULAR PAIRS INTERFERENCEEFFECTS INTHEINFRAREDSPECTRUMOFHD 83 G.C.Tabisz 1 Introduction 83 2 Interference 84 3 Experimentalevidence 84 4 Collisional propagation 86 5 Calculations 88 6 Dipolemomentcomponents 89 7 Planetaryatmospheres 90 8 Summaryandneedsforfuture 91 COLLISION-INDUCEDABSORPTION INDIPOLARMOLECULE–HOMONUCLEARDIATOMICPAIRS 93 A.Brown,R.H.Tipping 1 Introduction 93 2 Theory 94 3 Resultsanddiscussion 95 4 Conclusions 97 CLUSTERING,SATURATEDVAPORS,ANDTHEATMOSPHERE: THE(H2O)n,H2O–N2,ANDH2O–O2 CASES 101 Z.Slanina,F.Uhl´ık 1 Introduction 101 2 Simpledimerization case 102 3 Clustersofanydimension 103 4 H2O–N2 andH2O–O2 hetero-dimers 105 EQUILIBRIUMCONSTANTSFORTHEFORMATION OFWEAKLYBOUNDDIMERS 111 A.A.Vigasin 1 Introduction 111 2 Generaloutline 113 3 Diatomicdimers 114 4 Quantumcorrections 120 5 Polyatomic dimers 121 6 Conclusions 122 COLLISIONINDUCEDFARWINGS OFCO2 ANDH2OBANDSINIRSPECTRA 125 M.V.Tonkov,N.N.Filippov 1 Introduction 125 2 Bandprofilestudies 126 3 Farwing approximation 127 4 Impactapproximation 130 5 H2Obandwings 133 6 Conclusions 135 FAR-WINGLINESHAPES: APPLICATIONTOTHEWATERCONTINUUM 137 R.H.Tipping,Q.Ma 1 Introduction 137 2 Results 140 Contents vii Part II LABORATORY STUDIES COLLISION-INDUCEDABSORPTIONINTHECO2 FERMITRIAD FORTEMPERATURESFROM211Kto296K 149 Y.I.Baranov,G.T.Fraser, W.J.Lafferty, A.A.Vigasin 1 Introduction 149 2 Experimental 150 3 Dataprocessing andresults 151 4 Conclusions 156 LABORATORYSTUDIESOFOXYGENCONTINUUMABSORPTION 159 Y.I.Baranov,G.T.Fraser, W.J.Lafferty, B.Mat´e,A.A.Vigasin MOLECULARBEAMSCATTERINGEXPERIMENTS ONSPECIESOFATMOSPHERICRELEVANCE: POTENTIALENERGYSURFACESFORCLUSTERS ANDQUANTUMMECHANICALPREDICTION OFSPECTRALFEATURES 169 V.Aquilanti,M.Bartolomei,D.Cappelletti,E.Carmona-Novillo, E.Cornicchi,M.Moix-Teixidor,M.Sabido´,F.Pirani 1 Introduction 170 2 Descriptionoftheinteraction 170 3 Clusterdynamics: boundstatesandspectralfeatures 175 4 Scatteringexperiments: simplehydrocarbonsandwater 177 COLLISION-INDUCEDABSORPTION OFGASEOUSOXYGENINTHEHERZBERGCONTINUUM 183 M.B.Kiseleva,G.Ya.Zelikina,M.V.Buturlimova,A.P.Burtsev 1 Introduction 183 2 Experiment 184 3 Analysisoftheexperimentaldata 185 4 Discussion 188 ABSORPTIONCROSS-SECTIONOFTHECOLLISION-INDUCED BANDSOFOXYGENFROMTHEUVTOTHENIR 193 C.Hermans,A.C.Vandaele,S.Fally,M.Carleer,R.Colin, B.Coquart,A.Jenouvrier, M.-F.Merienne 1 Introduction 194 2 Experimental 194 3 Results 196 4 Impactonatmosphericretrievals 200 5 Summaryandconclusion 200 CAVITYRING-DOWNSPECTROSCOPY OFO2–O2 COLLISIONALINDUCEDABSORPTION 203 M.Sneep,W.Ubachs 1 Introduction 203 2 PrinciplesofCavityRing-DownSpectroscopy 204 3 Measurementsonsmallsamples 206 4 CRDmeasurementsofoxygencollisional complexes 207 viii WEAKLY INTERACTING MOLECULAR PAIRS LABORATORYFOURIERTRANSFORMSPECTROSCOPYOFTHE WATERABSORPTIONCONTINUUMFROM2500 TO22500cm−1 213 M.Carleer, M.Kiseleva,S.Fally,P.-F.Coheur, C.Clerbaux, R.Colin, L.Daumont,A.Jenouvrier, M.-F.Merienne,C.Hermans,A.C.Vandaele 1 Introduction 214 2 Experimental 214 3 Resultsanddiscussion 216 4 Conclusion 219 INFRAREDSPECTRAOFWEAKLY-BOUNDCOMPLEXES ANDCOLLISION-INDUCEDEFFECTS INVOLVINGATMOSPHERICMOLECULES 223 A.R.W.McKellar 1 Introduction 223 2 Linksbetweenweakly-bounddimersand“normal”spectra 224 3 Afamilyofatmospheric vanderWaals molecules,(N2)2,N2–CO,and (CO)2 228 4 Thewater dimer,aspectroscopic challenge 230 THEFAR-INFRAREDCONTINUUM INTHESPECTRUMOFWATERVAPOR 233 X.Wang,A.Senchuk, G.C.Tabisz 1 Introduction 233 2 Experimentalconsiderations 234 3 Continuumanalysis 235 4 Concludingremarks 235 RESONATORSPECTROSCOPYASANEWMETHOD OFINVESTIGATIONOFUNCONVENTIONAL MILLIMETER-WAVEATMOSPHERICABSORBERS 239 A.A.Shvetsov, M.Y.Tretyakov, M.A.Koshelev, A.F.Krupnov,V.V.Parshin 1 Introduction 239 2 Aprincipleofthewiderangemicrowaveresonatorspectroscopy 240 3 Experimentalset-up 241 4 Procedureandresultsofthemeasurements 243 5 Conclusion 245 Part III ATMOSPHERIC APPLICATIONS LOOK-UPTABLEANDINTERPOLATIONMETHODS FORRADIATIVETRANSFERCALCULATIONSINTHEINFRARED APPLICATIONTOBALLOONANDSATELLITESPECTRA 249 M.Eremenko, S.Payan,Y.T´e,G.Dufour,V.Ferreira, P.Jeseck, C.Camy-Peyret, A.Mitsel 1 Introduction 250 2 Look-uptabledescription 250 3 Comparison ofLook-uptablesinterpolationandLine-by-line calculations 253 4 Calculation time 254 5 Applicationofwidespectralregionanalysis 257 6 Conclusions 257 Contents ix THEIMPACTOFNEWWATERVAPORSPECTROSCOPY ONSATELLITERETRIEVALS 259 A.N.Maurellis,R.Lang,J.E.Williams,W.J.vander Zande,K.Smith, D.A.Newnham,J.Tennyson,R.N.Tolchenov 1 Introduction 260 2 Theatmosphereaslaboratory 261 3 Retrievaltheory 261 4 Resultsofsimulations 264 5 Newlaboratory measurementsofthewatervaporcontinuum 267 6 Conclusions 269 SPECTROSCOPICANDTHERMOCHEMICALINFORMATION ONTHEO2-O2 COLLISIONALCOMPLEX INFERREDFROMATMOSPHERICUV/VISIBLE O4 ABSORPTIONBANDPROFILEMEASUREMENTS 273 K.Pfeilsticker,H.B¨osch,R.Fitzenberger, C.Camy-Peyret 1 Introduction 274 2 Observations 275 3 Discussionandconclusion 279 Index 285 Preface The Advanced Research Workshop entitled “Weakly Interacting Molecular Pairs: Unconventional Absorbers of Radiation in the Atmo- sphere” was held in Abbaye de Fontevraud, France, from April 29 to May 3, 2002. The meeting involved 40 researchers from 14 countries. The goal of this meeting was to address a problem that the scientific community is aware of for many years. Up now, however, the solu- tion for this problem is far from satisfactory. Pair effects are called unconventional in the title of this meeting. In specific spectral domains and/or geophysical conditions they are recognized to play a dominant role in the absorption/emission properties of the atmosphere. Water vapor continuum absorption is among the most prominent examples. Permanently improving accuracy of both laboratory studies and field observations requires better knowledge of the spectroscopic features at- tributable to molecular pairs which may form at equilibrium. The Workshop was targeted both to clarify the pending questions and, as farasfeasible, totracethepath topossibleanswerssincetheunderlying phenomena are yet incompletely understood and since a reliable theory is often not available. On the other hand, the lack of precise laboratory data on bimolecular absorption is often precluding the construction of reliable theoretical models. Ideally, the knowledge accumulated in the courseoflaboratorystudiesshouldcorrelate withthepractical demands from those who are carrying out atmospheric field measurements and space observations. The Workshop’ co-directors have been pursuingseveral goals. First, we are hoping that the interested reader might be curious to discover the state-of-the-art methods, theories and techniques used for the study of weakly interacting molecular pairs—an interdisciplinary domain of science. Oursecond goal is topointout at serious deficiencies inthe un- derstanding of bimolecular phenomena occurring in the atmosphere in order to stimulate new laboratory and theoretical investigations. Third, our motivation is to open new ways in which laboratory measurements and theoretical developments could be more efficiently used for remote xi
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