continuous spectrum
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major reference
- In electromagnetic radiation: Continuous spectra of electromagnetic radiation
Such spectra are emitted by any warm substance. Heat is the irregular motion of electrons, atoms, and molecules; the higher the temperature, the more rapid the motion. Since electrons are much lighter than atoms, irregular thermal motion produces irregular oscillatory…
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characteristics
- In spectrum
…solids is said to be continuous because all wavelengths are present. The spectrum of incandescent gases, on the other hand, is called a line spectrum because only a few wavelengths are emitted. These wavelengths appear to be a series of parallel lines because a slit is used as the light-imaging…
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principles of spectroscopy
- In spectroscopy: Broadband-light sources
…then overlap and form a continuous—i.e., nondiscrete—spectrum. Similar phenomena occur in high-pressure arc lamps, in which broadening of spectral lines occurs owing to high collision rates.
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stars and stellar spectra
- In star: Line spectrum
The continuous (as distinct from the line) spectrum of the Sun is produced primarily by the photodissociation of negatively charged hydrogen ions (H−)—i.e., atoms of hydrogen to which an extra electron is loosely attached. In the Sun’s atmosphere, when H− is subsequently destroyed by photodissociation, it…
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X rays
- In spectroscopy: Relation to atomic structure
If the continuous spectrum from an X-ray source is passed through an absorbing material, it is found that the absorption coefficient changes sharply at X-ray wavelengths corresponding to the energy just required to remove an electron from a specific inner shell to form an ion. The sudden…
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