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Absorbing Column Density (nH) ○◂|Definition|1st|20251119205401-00-⌔
Area density - Wikipedia#Astronomy
Astronomy
In astronomy, the column density is generally used to indicate the number of atoms or molecules per square cm (cm) along the line of sight in a particular direction, as derived from observations of e.g. the 21 cm hydrogen line or from observations of a certain molecular species. Also the interstellar extinction can be related to the column density of H or H.1
The concept of area density can be useful when analysing accretion disks. In the case of a disk seen face-on, area density for a given area of the disk is defined as column density: that is, either as the mass of substance per unit area integrated along the vertical path that goes through the disk (line-of-sight), from the bottom to the top of the medium:
where denotes the vertical coordinate (e.g., height or depth), or as the number or count of a substance—rather than the mass—per unit area integrated along a path (column number density):
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“Column Density | COSMOS”. ↩
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