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arxiv: 1907.04499 · v1 · pith:3LK5CIJSnew · submitted 2019-07-10 · ⚛️ physics.optics

Determination of the damping co-efficient of electrons in optically transparent glasses at the true resonance frequency in the ultraviolet from an analysis of the Lorentz-Maxwell model of dispersion

Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 23:46 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ⚛️ physics.optics
keywords Lorentz-Maxwell modelresonance frequencydamping coefficientoptically transparent glassesultraviolet dispersionabsorption coefficientextinction coefficientreflectance
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The pith

The Lorentz-Maxwell model determines a unique true resonance frequency and damping coefficient for electrons in glass by equating the frequencies of maximum absorption and maximum average energy per cycle.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper examines the Lorentz-Maxwell dispersion model with refractive index data for glass to locate the true resonance frequency in the ultraviolet and the damping coefficient there. It defines true resonance in the absorption region as the point where the absorption coefficient reaches its maximum at the same frequency where the average energy per cycle of the electrons is also maximized. Numerical solution of the two resulting equations produces a single pair of values for resonance frequency and damping coefficient. With damping treated as constant over a narrow absorption range, the model then predicts the frequencies of maximum extinction coefficient and maximum reflectance, which align with existing measurements on silica glasses.

Core claim

The Lorentz-Maxwell model of dispersion allows determination of the true resonance frequency in the ultraviolet and the damping coefficient at that frequency for electrons in optically transparent glasses by requiring that the frequency of maximum absorption coefficient equals the frequency of maximum average energy per cycle of the electrons.

What carries the argument

Simultaneous numerical solution of the pair of equations obtained from the conditions for maximum absorption coefficient and maximum average energy per cycle within the Lorentz-Maxwell model.

If this is right

  • Frequencies of maximum extinction coefficient and maximum reflectance follow directly from the solved resonance parameters and agree with published silica glass data.
  • The damping coefficient can be taken as constant across a small frequency interval in the absorption region without loss of consistency with observations.
  • The resonance frequency lies in the ultraviolet and the damping coefficient takes a specific numerical value fixed by the two maxima conditions.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The same numerical procedure could be repeated for other transparent solids once their refractive index curves are known.
  • If damping varies with frequency, the two-maxima condition would need re-derivation to keep the resonance identification intact.
  • The approach supplies concrete parameter values that could be inserted into calculations of ultraviolet transmission or reflection for optical components made from glass.

Load-bearing premise

The true resonance condition holds when the frequency of maximum absorption coefficient is identical to the frequency of maximum average energy per cycle of the electrons.

What would settle it

A mismatch between the model's predicted frequencies of maximum extinction coefficient or reflectance and the measured values for silica glasses would falsify the derived resonance frequency and damping coefficient.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 1907.04499 by Surajit Chakrabarti.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Distribution of the absorption coefficient [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p023_1.png] view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Distribution of the extinction coefficient [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p024_2.png] view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: Distribution of Reflectance R in the absorption region 25 [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p025_3.png] view at source ↗
read the original abstract

The Lorentz-Maxwell model of dispersion of light has been analyzed in this paper to determine the true resonance frequency in the ultraviolet for the electrons in optically transparent glasses and the damping coefficient at this frequency. For this we needed the refractive indices of glass in the optical frequency range. We argue that the true resonance condition in the absorption region prevails when the frequency at which the absorption coefficient is maximum is the same as the frequency at which the average energy per cycle of the electrons is also a maximum. We have simultaneously solved the two equations obtained from the two maxima conditions numerically to arrive at a unique solution for the true resonance frequency and the damping coefficient at this frequency. Assuming the damping coefficient to be constant over a small frequency range in the absorption region, we have determined the frequencies at which the extinction coefficient and the reflectance are maxima. These frequencies match very well with the published data for silica glasses available from the literature.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

3 major / 1 minor

Summary. The manuscript analyzes the Lorentz-Maxwell dispersion model to determine the resonance frequency ω_r and damping coefficient γ for electrons in optically transparent glasses in the ultraviolet. It argues that the true resonance condition occurs at the frequency where both the absorption coefficient and the average energy per cycle of the electrons reach maxima, derives two equations from setting their derivatives with respect to frequency to zero, and solves them numerically for a unique pair (ω_r, γ) using refractive-index data in the optical range. Assuming γ is constant over a small frequency interval, the authors then compute the frequencies of maximum extinction coefficient and reflectance and report good agreement with published values for silica glasses.

Significance. If the central assumption linking resonance to the coincidence of those two maxima is valid and the numerical extraction is robust, the approach would offer a route to extract damping at resonance directly from refractive-index measurements without separate absorption data. The reported agreement with literature extinction and reflectance peaks would then constitute an independent consistency check. However, the significance is reduced by the absence of a derivation of the resonance condition from the driven-oscillator dynamics and by the lack of any sensitivity or error analysis on the input data.

major comments (3)
  1. [Abstract / model-analysis section] Abstract and the opening of the model-analysis section: the defining premise that 'the true resonance condition in the absorption region prevails when the frequency at which the absorption coefficient is maximum is the same as the frequency at which the average energy per cycle of the electrons is also a maximum' is introduced as an argument without derivation from the Lorentz oscillator equation of motion or demonstration that the resulting ω_r coincides with the natural frequency ω_0 in the γ → 0 limit.
  2. [Numerical solution paragraph] The numerical solution paragraph: the claim of a 'unique solution' for (ω_r, γ) is made after imposing the two maxima conditions, yet no error propagation, no sensitivity analysis on the refractive-index data, and no test of stability under small shifts in the assumed frequency window are provided; the role of the visible refractive-index data in fixing the oscillator strength or other parameters prior to the solve is also not stated.
  3. [Extinction/reflectance comparison section] Extinction/reflectance comparison section: the frequencies of maximum extinction and reflectance are computed from the fitted (ω_r, γ) and compared with literature; because the same parameters were obtained by fitting the dispersion model to refractive-index data, this comparison risks circularity and does not constitute an independent validation of the extracted resonance condition.
minor comments (1)
  1. [Model-analysis section] Notation for the average energy per cycle should be defined explicitly with an equation number when first introduced.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

3 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading and constructive comments on our manuscript. We address each of the major comments below and propose revisions where appropriate to strengthen the presentation.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Abstract / model-analysis section] Abstract and the opening of the model-analysis section: the defining premise that 'the true resonance condition in the absorption region prevails when the frequency at which the absorption coefficient is maximum is the same as the frequency at which the average energy per cycle of the electrons is also a maximum' is introduced as an argument without derivation from the Lorentz oscillator equation of motion or demonstration that the resulting ω_r coincides with the natural frequency ω_0 in the γ → 0 limit.

    Authors: The premise is presented as a physical argument for identifying the true resonance. We acknowledge that an explicit derivation from the driven-oscillator equation of motion is not provided in the manuscript. In the revised version, we will include a short section demonstrating that the proposed condition reduces to the undamped natural frequency ω_0 as γ approaches zero, thereby connecting it more directly to the standard Lorentz model. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [Numerical solution paragraph] The numerical solution paragraph: the claim of a 'unique solution' for (ω_r, γ) is made after imposing the two maxima conditions, yet no error propagation, no sensitivity analysis on the refractive-index data, and no test of stability under small shifts in the assumed frequency window are provided; the role of the visible refractive-index data in fixing the oscillator strength or other parameters prior to the solve is also not stated.

    Authors: We agree that additional analysis would improve the robustness of the results. In the revision, we will add error propagation from the refractive index uncertainties, a sensitivity study varying the input data within reported errors, and tests of the solution stability for different frequency windows. We will also clarify how the oscillator strength is determined from the visible refractive index data before solving for ω_r and γ. revision: yes

  3. Referee: [Extinction/reflectance comparison section] Extinction/reflectance comparison section: the frequencies of maximum extinction and reflectance are computed from the fitted (ω_r, γ) and compared with literature; because the same parameters were obtained by fitting the dispersion model to refractive-index data, this comparison risks circularity and does not constitute an independent validation of the extracted resonance condition.

    Authors: This comparison is not circular. The values of ω_r and γ are extracted exclusively from refractive-index measurements in the visible optical range. The subsequent calculation of the extinction and reflectance maxima frequencies constitutes a prediction for the ultraviolet region, which is then compared to independent experimental data reported in the literature for silica glasses. This provides an external validation of the model rather than a fit to the same dataset. revision: no

Circularity Check

1 steps flagged

True resonance defined as coincidence of absorption-max and energy-max; parameters solved to enforce that definition

specific steps
  1. self definitional [Abstract]
    "We argue that the true resonance condition in the absorption region prevails when the frequency at which the absorption coefficient is maximum is the same as the frequency at which the average energy per cycle of the electrons is also a maximum. We have simultaneously solved the two equations obtained from the two maxima conditions numerically to arrive at a unique solution for the true resonance frequency and the damping coefficient at this frequency."

    The paper defines the true resonance condition as the coincidence of the two maxima and then numerically solves the pair of equations that enforce d(absorption coeff)/dω = 0 and d(average energy)/dω = 0 at the same ω_r. The resulting ω_r and γ are therefore the values that satisfy the imposed definitional condition by construction; the method does not derive that this coincidence must occur at the physical resonance from the underlying Lorentz oscillator equation of motion.

full rationale

The paper's central determination of ω_r and γ rests on imposing the two derivative-zero conditions at the same frequency and solving the resulting system. This step is self-definitional because the 'true resonance' is stipulated to be exactly the point satisfying those conditions, with no derivation showing that this point coincides with the natural frequency ω_0 of the driven oscillator or recovers known limits. The subsequent computation of extinction and reflectance peak frequencies then follows directly from the same parameters and the constant-γ assumption, so the reported agreement with literature is a consistency check within the imposed framework rather than an independent test. No external benchmark or first-principles justification for the coincidence premise is supplied in the quoted sections.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

2 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The central claim rests on an author-defined coincidence condition for 'true resonance' and on the assumption that damping is constant over a narrow absorption band; both are introduced without independent justification beyond the numerical convenience they provide.

free parameters (2)
  • resonance frequency ω0
    Determined by simultaneous numerical solution of the two maxima conditions using measured refractive indices.
  • damping coefficient γ
    Determined by the same numerical solution and then assumed constant over a small frequency interval.
axioms (2)
  • ad hoc to paper The true resonance condition in the absorption region prevails when the frequency at which the absorption coefficient is maximum is the same as the frequency at which the average energy per cycle of the electrons is also a maximum.
    This equality is presented as the defining argument that allows the two equations to be solved for a unique pair (ω0, γ).
  • domain assumption The damping coefficient can be treated as constant over a small frequency range in the absorption region.
    Invoked to extend the solved γ value to the calculation of extinction and reflectance maxima.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5696 in / 1801 out tokens · 24125 ms · 2026-05-24T23:46:57.692013+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

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