Table 163. 

 STANDARD SOLAR WAVE-LENGTHS. ROWLAND'S VALUES. 



17, 



Wave-lengths are in Angstrom units (10' mm.), in air at 20° C and 76 cm. of mercury pressure. 

 The intensities run from i, just clearly visible on the map, to 1000 for the H and K lines; below 

 I in order of faintness to oooo as the lines are more and more ditiicult to see. This table contains 

 only the lines above 5. 



N indicates a line not clearly defined, probably an undissolved multiple line ; s, a faded appear- 

 ing line; d, a double. In the "substance" column, where two or more elements are given, the 

 line is compound ; the order in which they are given indicates the portion of the line due to each 

 element ; when the solar line is too strong to be due wholly to the element given, it is represented, 

 -Fe, for e-xample ; when commas separate the elements instead of a dash, the metallic lines coin- 

 cide with the same part of the solar line, Fe, Cr, for example. 



Capital letters ne.xt the wave-length numbers are the ordinary designations of the lines. A indi- 

 cates atmospheric lines, (wv), due to water vapor, (O), due to Oxygen. 



Corrections to reduce Rowland's wave-lengths to standards of Table i6o (the accepted standards, 1913). Temperature 

 15° C, pressure 760 mm. 



The differences " (Fabry-Buisson-arc-tron) — (Rowland-solar-iron)" lines were plotted, a smooth curve dtawn, and 

 the following values obtained : 



Wave-length 3000. 3100. 3200. 33"o. 3400. 3500. 3600. 3700. 

 Correction — .106 — .115 — .124 — .137 — .148 — .154 — .155 — .140 



H. A. Rowland, "A preliminary table of solar-spectrum wave-lengths," Astrophysical Journal, 1-6, 1895-1897. 

 Smithsonian Tables. 



