posted on 2023-03-26, 17:03authored byKlavs Hansen, Ori Licht, Adeliya Kurbanov, Yoni Toker
The later stages of cooling of molecules and clusters
in the interstellar
medium are dominated by emission of vibrational infrared radiation.
With the development of cryogenic storage it has become possible to
experimentally study these processes. Recent storage ring results
demonstrate that intramolecular vibrational redistribution takes place
within the cooling process, and an harmonic cascade model has been
used to interpret the data. Here we analyze this model and show that
the energy distributions and the photon emission rates develop into
near-universal functions that can be characterized with only a few
parameters, irrespective of the precise vibrational spectra and oscillator
strengths of the systems. We show that the photon emission rate and
emitted power vary linearly with total excitation energy with a small
offset. The time developments of ensemble internal energy distributions
are calculated with respect to their first two moments. The excitation
energy decreases exponentially with a rate constant which is the average
of all k1→0 Einstein coefficients,
and the time development of the variance is also calculated.