Publication
Names
  • M. Schnaiter
  • H. Mutschke
  • J. Dorschner
  • Th. Henning
Title
Matrix-isolated nano-sized carbon grains as an analog for the 217.5 nanometer feature carrier
Abstract
The effect of particle shape or particle clustering on the extinction behavior of nano-sized hydrogenated carbon grains is investigated experimentally. The particles were extracted by a molecular beam technique at different condensation and clustering states and isolated in an argon matrix for UV spectroscopy. The state of clustering in the samples was controlled by transmission electron microscopy analysis. The simple spherical morphology of the matrix-isolated nonagglomerated particles permitted the derivation of reliable optical constants. A clear correlation was found between the measured UV feature width and the degree of particle clustering, in agreement with theoretical investigations based on the derived optical data. Therefore, the results prove unambiguously the expectation that the optical properties of carbonaceous grain material are strongly influenced by the particle shape and the clustering degree. For particles produced in hydrogen-containing atmospheres, the UV extinction peak was shifted blueward to a position close to the 217.5 nm hump. This shift was found to be nearly independent of the amount of hydrogen in the condensation zone. We also discuss the infrared spectra of the hydrogenated carbon materials. The astrophysical implications of the results are discussed with regard to the observational as well as the elemental abundance constraints.
Keywords
optical constants, carbon, nanoparticles, ultraviolet, interstellar extinction
Content
instrument-technique, material-matter, spectral data, spectral data use
Year
1998
Journal
The Astrophysical Journal
Volume
498
Pages
486 - 496
Document type
article
Publication state
published