The relation between far-UV and visible extinctions
read the original abstract
For directions of sufficcient reddening (E(B-V) >~ 0.25), there is a simple relation between the slope of the extinction curve in the far-UV and E(B-V). Regardless of direction, the far-UV extinction curve is proportional to 1/lambda^n exp(-2e(B-V)/lambda) (lambda in micron, n = 4), in accordance with the idea that reddened stars spectra are contaminated by scattered light (Zagury, 2001b). This relation is not compatible with the standard theory of extinction which states that far-UV and visible extinctions are due to different classes of grains. In the standard theory model the two (far-UV and visible) extinctions vary thus independently according to the proportion of each type of grains. In preceding papers I have shown that the standard theory cannot explain UV observations of nebulae, and is contradicted by the UV spectra of stars with very low reddening: for how long shall the standard theory be considered as the interpretation of the extinction curve?
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.