Environ Sci Pollut Res Int
May 2010
Absorption spectroscopy, which is widely used for concentration measurements of tropospheric and stratospheric compounds, requires precise values of the absorption cross-sections of the measured species. NO(2), O(2) and its collision-induced absorption spectrum, and H(2)O absorption cross-sections have been measured at temperature and pressure conditions prevailing in the Earth's atmosphere. Corrections to the generally accepted analysis procedures used to resolve the convolution problem are also proposed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe absorption spectra of the O(2) Herzberg band systems (A(3)Sigma(+)(u)-X(3)Sigma(-)(g), c(1)Sigma(-)(u)-X(3)Sigma(-)(g), and A' (3)Delta(u)-X(3)Sigma(-)(g)) lying in the wavelength region 240-300 nm were reinvestigated. The coupling of a long absorption cell and a high-resolution Fourier transform spectrometer has allowed the observation of numerous weak lines which were not reported previously. From the rotational analysis of the line positions, determined with an accuracy of 0.
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