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An Example

Consider a pure hydrogen gas at 10080 K and a gas pressure of $10^{-5}$ atmospheres. Find the ratio of the density of H$^+$ to H$_0$.

The ionization potential of hydrogen is $\chi_0=13.6$ eV. The ratio we want is

\begin{displaymath}\frac{N_+}{N_0} = A (kT)^{3/2} N_e^{-1} \exp(-\chi_0/kT)\end{displaymath}

It is helpful here to work with $\log_{10}$ and rewrite the equation as

\begin{displaymath}\log_{10}\frac{N_+}{N_0} = \log_{10}A + \frac{3}{2}\log_{10} ...
...}{2}\log_{10} T - \log_{10} N_e - \frac{\chi_0}{kT} \log_{10} e\end{displaymath}

In this equation $\chi_0$ would have to be in Joules, but substituting for $k$ and making the change in units to eV for $\chi_0$ gives

\begin{displaymath}\log_{10}\frac{N_+}{N_0} = \log_{10}A + \frac{3}{2}\log_{10} ...
...rac{3}{2}\log_{10} T - \log_{10} N_e - \frac{5040}{T}\chi_0(eV)\end{displaymath}

In this situation every ionized H atom makes both a proton (H$^+$) and an electron $e$. The densities of these two components are equal

\begin{displaymath}N_e = N_+\end{displaymath}

and consequently the Saha equation becomes

\begin{displaymath}\log_{10}\frac{N_+}{N_0} = \log_{10}A + \frac{3}{2}\log_{10} ...
...rac{3}{2}\log_{10} T - \log_{10} N_e - \frac{5040}{T}\chi_0(eV)\end{displaymath}


\begin{displaymath}\log_{10}\frac{N_+^2}{N_0} =
\log_{10}A +
\frac{3}{2}\log_{10} (1.3806 \times 10^{-23}) \;\;+\end{displaymath}


\begin{displaymath}\frac{3}{2}\log_{10} (10080) -
\frac{5040 \times 13.6}{10080}\end{displaymath}

Thus we have an equation involving the ion density $N_+$ and neutral density $N_0$

\begin{displaymath}\log_{10}\frac{N_+^2}{N_0} = 20.588\end{displaymath}


\begin{displaymath}\frac{N_+^2}{N_0} = 3.874\times10^{20}\end{displaymath}

We also know that the total pressure is due to neutral atoms, ions, and electrons. If $N$ is the total particle density, the equation of state at this temperature and pressure will be the ideal gas law

\begin{displaymath}P = N k T\end{displaymath}

In this example

\begin{displaymath}P = 10^{-5} \times 101325 \;\;\mathrm{pascal}\end{displaymath}

and

\begin{displaymath}N = N_+ + N_e + N_0 = 2\;N_+ + N_0\end{displaymath}

At 10080 K the gas law gives

\begin{displaymath}N = P / kT\end{displaymath}


\begin{displaymath}N = \frac{1.01325}{1.3806 \times 10^{-23} \times 10080}\end{displaymath}


\begin{displaymath}N = 7.281 \times 10^{18}\;\;\mathrm{m}^{-3}\end{displaymath}


\begin{displaymath}2\;N_+ + N_0 = 7.281 \times 10^{18}\;\;\mathrm{m}^{-3}\end{displaymath}

We now have two equations and two unknowns:

\begin{displaymath}\frac{N_+^2}{N_0} = 3.874\times10^{20}\end{displaymath}


\begin{displaymath}2\;N_+ + N_0 = 7.281 \times 10^{18}\;\;\mathrm{m}^{-3}\end{displaymath}

We solve for $N_0$ in the second equation

\begin{displaymath}N_0 = 7.281 \times 10^{18} - 2\;N_+\end{displaymath}

and substitute in the first one

\begin{displaymath}\frac{N_+^2}{7.281 \times 10^{18} - 2\;N_+} = 3.874\times10^{20}\end{displaymath}

With rearrangement into a standard quadratic form

\begin{displaymath}a N_+^2 + b N_+ + c = 0 \end{displaymath}


\begin{displaymath}a=1\end{displaymath}


\begin{displaymath}b =7.748\times10^{20}\end{displaymath}


\begin{displaymath}c = -2.82066 \times 10^{39}\end{displaymath}

the solutions are

\begin{displaymath}N_+ = \frac{-b \pm \sqrt{b^2 -4ac}}{2a} \end{displaymath}

The solution that is not negative is

\begin{displaymath}N_+ = 3.62355 \times10^{18} \;\; \mathrm{m}^{-3}\end{displaymath}

Return now to the other equation

\begin{displaymath}2\;N_+ + N_0 = 7.281 \times 10^{18}\;\;\mathrm{m}^{-3}\end{displaymath}

and substitute for the value of $N_+$ we have just found to get

\begin{displaymath}N_0 = 7.281 \times 10^{18} - 2 \times 3.62355 \times10^{18} \end{displaymath}


\begin{displaymath}N_0 = 3.39 \times 10^{16} \;\; \mathrm{m}^3\end{displaymath}

The ratio we were seeking is

\begin{displaymath}\frac{N_+}{N_0} = \frac{3.62355 \times10^{18}}{3.39 \times 10^{16}}\end{displaymath}


\begin{displaymath}\frac{N_+}{N_0} = 106\end{displaymath}

The ratio is

\begin{displaymath}\frac{N_+}{N_0} = 106\end{displaymath}

At this temperature most of the hydrogen is ionized.


next up previous
Next: Questions Up: saha Previous: Saha Equation
John Kielkopf
2005-10-12