We note that the coordinate transformations used in the Burgess & Tully method have a close
connection with the general mathematical shape of the underlying collision strengths, so some
commonality of the optimised fitting and strict interpolation approaches can be promoted by making
the coordinate transformations and the approximate forms analytically similar. We shall continue to
use the Burgess & Tully transformations in this work and their distinction of collision strength
types by a number (1
dipole; 2
non-dipole, non-spin change; 3
spin change;
4
weak dipole) but they will apply strictly to the high energy region. We introduce new
transformations for the threshold region and these will be distinguished by a letter. The
transformations must satisfy certain monotonicity and continuity constraints - the latter at a switching
energy where the low energy and high energy transformations meet. Then we require related approximate
forms for the low and high energy regions which can again match smoothly at a switching energy.
The shapes of the energy transformations and approximate forms for the mapping and
representation of collision strengths in
the low energy (threshold) and high energy (asymptotic) regions which have proved useful and relevant to
our further discussion are illustrated in Fig. 1. The dashed lines relate to
transformations and the solid lines to approximate forms. The dashed curve (a'), with
(B is the threshold power law - cf. Eq. (1)) is the simplest monotonic form
for the threshold behaviour of s-wave
dominated collision strengths. Its curvature allows gradient matching with the
energy transformation of logarithmic character for dipole
allowed collision strengths of the Burgess-Tully type 1 and it is represented here
by the solid line asymptotic form labelled 1. For
,
the positive curvature
is unsuitable for matching. The dashed curve (a) is also monotonic with the same
threshold power law and is compatible with the energy transformations used in all
of the Burgess-Tully types. The characteristic of non-dipole and spin-change collision
strengths in the asymptotic region (solid lines (2)and (3) respectively)
is to show negative gradients and the solid line threshold form (a) with B = 1.5 is
provided for matching in this case. The energy threshold transformation, dashed line
(b), is an alternative to (a) but with an exponential character. We prescribe
these transformations in detail below and the approximate forms in Sect. 4.
Let the transition energy between lower level i and upper level
f be Eif. The threshold scaled energy parameter is defined by
X=(Ef/Eif)+1. Working in
energies Ef relative to the threshold energy, let E0 mark the division
between the threshold region and the high energy region. We call this the switching energy.
We seek mappings x- and x+ of the
independent variable from final energies [0,E0] to [-1, 0] and
from final energies
to [0,1] respectively and compatible transformations of
the collision strengths. We introduce a scale parameter, B, for the threshold
region and C, for the high energy region. C is the Burgess-Tully
parameter. The transformations are given below, indexed by Burgess-Tully type
(see Burgess & Tully 1992) and a letter for the threshold type.
x+ | = | ![]() |
|
x- | = | 2(Ef/E0)B/((Ef/E0)B+1)-1 | |
y+ | = | ![]() |
(1) |
y- | = | ![]() |
|
((Ef/E0)-1))) | |||
y+(0) | = | ![]() |
|
y+(1) | = | ![]() |
x+ | = | ((Ef-E0)/Eif)/(((Ef-E0)/Eif)+C) | |
x- | = | 2(Ef/E0)B/((Ef/E0)B+1)-1 | |
y+ | = | ![]() |
(2) |
y- | = | ![]() |
|
y+(0) | = | ![]() |
x+ | = | ((Ef-E0)/Eif)/(((Ef-E0)/Eif)+C) | |
x- | = | 2(Ef/E0)B/((Ef/E0)B+1)-1 | |
y+ | = | ![]() |
(3) |
y- | = | ![]() |
|
((Ef/E0)-1))) | |||
y+(0) | = | ![]() |
x+ | = | ![]() |
|
x- | = | 2(Ef/E0)B/((Ef/E0)B+1)-1 | |
y+ | = | ![]() |
(4) |
y- | = | ![]() |
|
![]() |
|||
y+(0) | = | ![]() |
|
y+(1) | = | ![]() |
x- | = | ![]() |
(5) |
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