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The emission from N II() is an important feature
in the
Earth's aurora and dayglow (Torr & Torr 1985;
Siskind & Barth 1987;
Bucsela & Sharp 1989) where the level
is populated by photodissociative ionization of N2
(Dalgarno et al.
1981; Victor & Dalgarno 1982). From the
observed doublet Bucsela & Sharp have obtained a value of
which is significantly lower than both the latest laboratory and theoretical
estimates. The O III doublet at 1666/1600 Å is frequently observed in
astronomical sources of low to medium density, and in some conditions the
branching ratio is found to depend on optical depth (Kastner & Bhatia
1989). Furthermore, in the case of symbiotic stars the
observed O III intercombination ratios are noticeably higher than the
theoretical value; this unusual effect has been interpreted by
Kastner et al.
(1989) as the result of Bowen pumping. The corresponding
lines in Fe XXI (271/242 Å) were first identified in the EUV spectra of
solar flares by Dere (1978) although any conclusion about the
magnitude of B, which is expected to be close to unity, is spoilt by the
blending with a strong line of Fe XIV.
Previous datasets for the intercombination transitions of the carbon sequence have been computed by Cheng et al. (MCDF, 1985) in a Multiconfiguration Dirac-Fock approach; by Froese Fischer & Saha (MCHF, 1985) in the well established Breit-Pauli Multiconfiguration Hartree-Fock method; by Bhatia (1982), Bhatia et al. (1987), Bhatia & Kastner (1993), Bhatia & Doschek (1993a, 1993b, 1993c, 1995) and Mason & Bhatia (1978) (to be hereafter referred to as SSTR) using the atomic structure code SUPERSTRUCTURE by Eissner et al. (1974); and by Aggarwal (1986), ,Aggarwal et al. (1997a, 1997b) and Bell et al. (1995) (referred to as CIV3) with the CIV3 program of Hibbert (1975). Comparisons and assessments of these datasets have yet to be made in order to determine much needed accuracy ratings.
In the on-going IRON Project (IP, Hummer et al. 1993), we are
interested in computing atomic data, namely radiative and collisional rates,
in isoelectronic sequences for astrophysical plasma diagnostics.
Although the emphasis is on the iron-group elements due to the needs of
recent space missions, e.g. the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO),
good accord with the
available detailed calculations for the lower members (C, N and O say) is
always a requisite in order to ensure good representations of
electron correlation effects and relativistic couplings at higher Z.
Electron impact excitation data involving the level
in ions of the carbon sequence have been reported within the IP by
Lennon
& Burke (1994).
We are concerned here with the corresponding
radiative rates, and in the context of the current discussion of
radiative lifetimes and branching ratios, we are
interested in studying isoelectronic trends in particular those of
the Breit operators. We attempt to end up also with a ranked
radiative dataset more accurate than previous work and one that will be
included in the IP public databases.
Note that a complete list of papers in the IP series can be found at the
URL http://www.am.qub.ac.uk/projects/iron/papers/papers. html.
In Sect. 2 we describe the present computational method and in Sect. 3
results are discussed in the light of extensive comparisons.
Conclusions are summarised in Sect. 4.
Copyright The European Southern Observatory (ESO)