In atmospheric radiation, Chandrasekhar's X- and Y-function appears as the solutions of problems involving diffusive reflection and transmission, introduced by the Indian American astrophysicist Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar.[1][2][3][4][5] The Chandrasekhar's X- and Y-function
defined in the interval
, satisfies the pair of nonlinear integral equations
![{\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}X(\mu )&=1+\mu \int _{0}^{1}{\frac {\Psi (\mu ')}{\mu +\mu '}}[X(\mu )X(\mu ')-Y(\mu )Y(\mu ')]\,d\mu ',\\[5pt]Y(\mu )&=e^{-\tau _{1}/\mu }+\mu \int _{0}^{1}{\frac {\Psi (\mu ')}{\mu -\mu '}}[Y(\mu )X(\mu ')-X(\mu )Y(\mu ')]\,d\mu '\end{aligned}}}](./acece5b1d39d913fff4aa1c9df24b3c538b15bc4.svg)
where the characteristic function
is an even polynomial in
generally satisfying the condition

and
is the optical thickness of the atmosphere. If the equality is satisfied in the above condition, it is called conservative case, otherwise non-conservative. These functions are related to Chandrasekhar's H-function as

and also

Approximation
The
and
can be approximated up to nth order as
![{\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}X(\mu )&={\frac {(-1)^{n}}{\mu _{1}\cdots \mu _{n}}}{\frac {1}{[C_{0}^{2}(0)-C_{1}^{2}(0)]^{1/2}}}{\frac {1}{W(\mu )}}[P(-\mu )C_{0}(-\mu )-e^{-\tau _{1}/\mu }P(\mu )C_{1}(\mu )],\\[5pt]Y(\mu )&={\frac {(-1)^{n}}{\mu _{1}\cdots \mu _{n}}}{\frac {1}{[C_{0}^{2}(0)-C_{1}^{2}(0)]^{1/2}}}{\frac {1}{W(\mu )}}[e^{-\tau _{1}/\mu }P(\mu )C_{0}(\mu )-P(-\mu )C_{1}(-\mu )]\end{aligned}}}](./f8c4225f1afe95129375c5984ecd5567715c0cb7.svg)
where
and
are two basic polynomials of order n (Refer Chandrasekhar chapter VIII equation (97)[6]),
where
are the zeros of Legendre polynomials and
, where
are the positive, non vanishing roots of the associated characteristic equation

where
are the quadrature weights given by

Properties
- If
are the solutions for a particular value of
, then solutions for other values of
are obtained from the following integro-differential equations

For conservative case, this integral property reduces to ![{\displaystyle \int _{0}^{1}[X(\mu )+Y(\mu )]\Psi (\mu )\,d\mu =1.}](./8d6ee7edef7eebb53c6446e1a2bff952f09095de.svg)
- If the abbreviations
for brevity are introduced, then we have a relation stating
In the conservative, this reduces to 
- If the characteristic function is
, where
are two constants, then we have
.
- For conservative case, the solutions are not unique. If
are solutions of the original equation, then so are these two functions
, where
is an arbitrary constant.
See also
References
- ^ Chandrasekhar, Subrahmanyan. Radiative transfer. Courier Corporation, 2013.
- ^ Howell, John R., M. Pinar Menguc, and Robert Siegel. Thermal radiation heat transfer. CRC press, 2010.
- ^ Modest, Michael F. Radiative heat transfer. Academic press, 2013.
- ^ Hottel, Hoyt Clarke, and Adel F. Sarofim. Radiative transfer. McGraw-Hill, 1967.
- ^ Sparrow, Ephraim M., and Robert D. Cess. "Radiation heat transfer." Series in Thermal and Fluids Engineering, New York: McGraw-Hill, 1978, Augmented ed. (1978).
- ^ Chandrasekhar, Subrahmanyan. Radiative transfer. Courier Corporation, 2013.