Fraunhofer lines


The Fraunhofer lines are a set of spectral absorption lines. They are dark absorption lines, seen in the optical spectrum of the Sun, and are formed when atoms in the solar atmosphere absorb light being emitted by the solar photosphere. The lines are named after German physicist Joseph von Fraunhofer, who observed them in 1814.

Discovery

In 1802, English chemist William Hyde Wollaston was the first person to note the appearance of a number of dark features in the solar spectrum. In 1814, Joseph von Fraunhofer independently rediscovered the lines and began to systematically study and measure their wavelengths. He mapped over 570 lines, designating the most prominent with the letters A through K and weaker lines with other letters. Modern observations of sunlight can detect many thousands of lines.
About 45 years later, Gustav Kirchhoff and Robert Bunsen noticed that several Fraunhofer lines coincide with characteristic emission lines identified in the spectra of heated chemical elements. They inferred that dark lines in the solar spectrum are caused by absorption by chemical elements in the solar atmosphere. Some of the other observed features were instead identified as telluric lines originating from absorption by oxygen molecules in the Earth's atmosphere.

Naming

The major Fraunhofer lines, and the elements they are associated with, are shown in the following table:
File:Solar spectral irradiance.svg|thumb|right|upright=2.5|350px|alt=Sun spectral irradiance measured with a calibrated spectrometer. The measurement was made on a sunny day on 13 June 2022 at noon from Hauterive, Switzerland. For photometry and colorimetry, standard measurements are usually carried out in the range 360–830 nm. Correlated color temperature : 5470 K. | Solar spectral irradiance measured with a calibrated optical spectrometer. Some of the characteristic Fraunhofer lines and their corresponding elements are indicated for the extended visible spectrum.


For photometry and colorimetry, standard measurements are usually carried out in the range 360–830 nm. From these data and for this spectral range, the correlated color temperature is 5470 K.

The Fraunhofer C, F, G′, and h lines correspond to the alpha, beta, gamma, and delta lines of the Balmer series of emission lines of the hydrogen atom. The Fraunhofer letters are now rarely used for those lines.
The D1 and D2 lines form a pair known as the "sodium doublet", the centre wavelength of which is given the designation letter "D". This historical designation for this line has stuck and is given to all the transitions between the ground state and the first excited state of the other alkali atoms as well. The D1 and D2 lines correspond to the fine-structure splitting of the excited states.
The Fraunhofer H and K letters are also still used for the calcium doublet in the violet part of the spectrum, important in astronomical spectroscopy.
There is disagreement in the literature for some line designations; for example, the Fraunhofer d line may refer to the cyan iron line at 466.814 nm, or alternatively to the yellow helium line at 587.5618 nm. Similarly, there is ambiguity regarding the e line, since it can refer to the spectral lines of both iron and mercury. In order to resolve ambiguities that arise in usage, ambiguous Fraunhofer line designations are preceded by the element with which they are associated.
Because of their well-defined wavelengths, Fraunhofer lines are often used to specify standard wavelengths for characterising the refractive index and dispersion properties of optical materials.