The diffuse interstellar bands: A dipole-bound state hypothesis

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Abstract

It is proposed that some, possibly many, of the unidentified diffuse interstellar absorption bands arise from rovibronic transitions between the ground states of negatively charged molecules and/or small grains, and shallow dipole-bound electronic states which lie close to the electron detachment threshold. Under this hypothesis the attributes for the neutral 'molecular' frameworks are electron affinities between 1 and 3 eV and permanent electric dipole moments of ∼2 debye or greater. Bound-bound spectra involving the lowest rotational levels have not been detected in the laboratory, but these proposed carriers appear to be capable of satisfying the main observational astronomical constraints: transitions that lie in the range from the near-ultraviolet to the near-infrared; a wide range of widths; band wavelengths that are invariant; and a large number of related but distinct carriers. The wavelengths of the lowest rotational lines of the 000 band of the transition between the ground and a dipole-bound electronic state of the CH2CN- molecule appear to be consistent with a diffuse band near 8037 Å.

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APA

Sarre, P. J. (2000). The diffuse interstellar bands: A dipole-bound state hypothesis. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 313(1). https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-8711.2000.03388.x

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