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Session 40 - The Interstellar Medium.
Display session, Tuesday, June 09
Atlas Ballroom,

[40.12] Particle Shapes and the 2175 ÅFeature

L. M. Will, P. Aannestad (Arizona State University)

The galactic interstellar extinction curve exhibits a pronounced feature at 2175 Å\ . The most striking characteristic of this feature is the relatively fixed nature of its central wavelength while the width of the feature may vary. Small graphite particles are often proposed as the carrier of this UV bump. However, graphite grains of a single size and shape cannot reproduce the observed width and peak characteristics simultaneously. Here we investigate to what extent these characteristics may be reproduced by invoking a shape distribution of prolate and oblate graphite particles.

The graphite constants calculated by Draine and Lee (ApJ,285,99) do not yield the narrowest 2175 Å\ features that have been observed. We have recalculated the dielectric function of astronomical graphite such that a spherical grain of radius 50 Å\ produces a feature with a peak at x_0=4.6 inverse microns and \gamma=0.8 . Using grains in the Rayleigh approximation, we wave calculated extinction curves for combinations of prolate, spherical, and oblate grain shapes, and successfully reproduced the stationary nature of the peak. In addition, such shape variations do give variations in the width of the feature whose relative magnitudes match the observations. However, the absolute values of the calculated widths fall short by approximately 10 percent compared with observed widths.


The author(s) of this abstract have provided an email address for comments about the abstract: lisa.will@asu.edu

Program listing for Tuesday