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In atmospheric
radiation In physics, radiation is the emission or transmission of energy in the form of waves or particles through space or through a material medium. This includes: * ''electromagnetic radiation'', such as radio waves, microwaves, infrared, vi ...
, Chandrasekhar's ''H''-function appears as the solutions of problems involving scattering, introduced by the Indian American astrophysicist Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar.Sparrow, Ephraim M., and Robert D. Cess. "Radiation heat transfer." Series in Thermal and Fluids Engineering, New York: McGraw-Hill, 1978, Augmented ed. (1978). The Chandrasekhar's ''H''-function H(\mu) defined in the interval 0\leq\mu\leq 1, satisfies the following nonlinear integral equation :H(\mu) = 1+\mu H(\mu)\int_0^1 \fracH(\mu') \, d\mu' where the characteristic function \Psi(\mu) is an even polynomial in \mu satisfying the following condition :\int_0^1\Psi(\mu) \, d\mu \leq \frac. If the equality is satisfied in the above condition, it is called ''conservative case'', otherwise ''non-conservative''.
Albedo Albedo (; ) is the measure of the diffuse reflection of solar radiation out of the total solar radiation and measured on a scale from 0, corresponding to a black body that absorbs all incident radiation, to 1, corresponding to a body that refl ...
is given by \omega_o= 2\Psi(\mu) = \text. An alternate form which would be more useful in calculating the ''H'' function numerically by iteration was derived by Chandrasekhar as, : \frac = \left -2\int_0^1\Psi(\mu) \, d\mu\right + \int_0^1 \fracH(\mu') \, d\mu'. In conservative case, the above equation reduces to :\frac= \int_0^1 \fracH(\mu')d\mu'.


Approximation

The ''H'' function can be approximated up to an order n as : H(\mu) = \frac\frac where \mu_i are the zeros of
Legendre polynomials In physical science and mathematics, Legendre polynomials (named after Adrien-Marie Legendre, who discovered them in 1782) are a system of complete and orthogonal polynomials, with a vast number of mathematical properties, and numerous applicat ...
P_ and k_\alpha are the positive, non vanishing roots of the associated characteristic equation :1 = 2 \sum_^n \frac where a_j are the quadrature weights given by :a_j = \frac\int_^1 \frac \, d\mu_j


Explicit solution in the complex plane

In complex variable z the ''H'' equation is : H(z) = 1- \int_0^1 \frac z H(\mu)\Psi(\mu) \, d\mu, \quad \int_0^1 , \Psi(\mu), \, d\mu \leq \frac, \quad \int_0^\delta , \Psi(\mu), \, d\mu \rightarrow 0, \ \delta\rightarrow 0 then for \Re (z)>0, a unique solution is given by :\ln H(z) = \frac \int_^ \ln T(w) \frac \, dw where the imaginary part of the function T(z) can vanish if z^2 is real i.e., z^2 = u+iv = u\ (v=0). Then we have : T(z) = 1- 2 \int_0^1 \Psi(\mu) \, d\mu - 2 \int_0^1 \frac \, d\mu The above solution is unique and bounded in the interval 0\leq z\leq 1 for conservative cases. In non-conservative cases, if the equation T(z)=0 admits the roots \pm 1/k, then there is a further solution given by :H_1(z) = H(z) \frac


Properties

*\int_0^1 H(\mu)\Psi(\mu) \, d\mu = 1-\left -2\int_0^1\Psi(\mu) \, d\mu \right. For conservative case, this reduces to \int_0^1 \Psi(\mu)d\mu=\frac. *\left -2\int_0^1\Psi(\mu) \, d\mu\right \int_0^1 H(\mu) \Psi(\mu) \mu^2 \, d\mu + \frac \left int_0^1 H(\mu)\Psi(\mu)\mu \, d\mu\right2 = \int_0^1 \Psi(\mu)\mu^2 \, d\mu. For conservative case, this reduces to \int_0^1 H(\mu)\Psi(\mu) \mu d\mu = \left \int_0^1 \Psi(\mu)\mu^2d\mu\right. *If the characteristic function is \Psi(\mu)=a+b\mu^2, where a, b are two constants(have to satisfy a+b/3\leq 1/2) and if \alpha_n = \int_0^1 H(\mu)\mu^n \, d\mu, \ n\geq 1 is the nth moment of the ''H'' function, then we have :\alpha_0 = 1 + \frac (a\alpha_0^2 + b \alpha_1^2) and :(a+b\mu^2) \int_0^1\frac\,d\mu'=\frac-b(\alpha_1-\mu\alpha_0)


See also

*
Chandrasekhar's X- and Y-function In atmospheric radiation, Chandrasekhar's ''X''- and Y-function appears as the solutions of problems involving diffusive reflection and transmission, introduced by the Indian American astrophysicist Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar. The Chandrasekhar's ...


External links

*MATLAB function to calculate the ''H'' function https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/fileexchange/29333-chandrasekhar-s-h-function


References

{{Reflist Special functions Integral equations Scattering Scattering, absorption and radiative transfer (optics)