The Origin of Variations in the 2175 Angstrom Extinction Bump
Abstract
In this paper, small graphite grains are assumed to produce the 2175 A interstellar extinction bump. The principal observational characteristic of the bump in the invariance of its central wavelength (2174 +/- 9 A) among various lines of sight through diverse environments. On the other hand, its Full Width at Half Maximum (FWHM) varies from about 0.80/micrometer to 1.2/micrometer among the same lines of sight. In this paper, the variations in bump width among different sight lines is attributed to coatings on the graphite grains. The necessary properties of the coating material are investigated. Simple neutral polycycli aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) have measured laboratory absorptions remarkably similar to those required to explain the broadening of the bump. Only 1.5% of cosmic carbon in PAHs is required to produce very broad bumps. Alternatively, about 2%-4% of the combined abundances of the refractory elements Fe and Mg, more highly depleted onto grains in dense regions than in the diffuse interstellar medium, could explain the mantles if their absorption rises rapidly with energy, as it does for MgO. Coatings of amorphous carbon, hydrogenated or not, diamond-like bonded carbon, or water ice do not have published optical constants that vary rapidly enough in wavenumber to produce the variations.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- February 1994
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 1994ApJ...422..176M
- Keywords:
-
- Coatings;
- Graphite;
- Interstellar Extinction;
- Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons;
- Spheroids;
- Ultraviolet Astronomy;
- Ultraviolet Radiation;
- Variations;
- Numerical Analysis;
- Optical Properties;
- Permittivity;
- Size Distribution;
- Astrophysics;
- ISM: DUST;
- EXTINCTION;
- ULTRAVIOLET: ISM