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Optical constants of Xe (Xenon)
Grace et al. 2017: Solid at 161.35 K; n 0.157–0.660 µm

Wavelength: µm
 (0.157–0.66)  
 

Complex refractive index (n+ik)[ i ]


n   k   LogX   LogY   eV

Derived optical constants

Dispersion formula [ i ]

$$n^2-1=0.4+\frac{0.6λ^2}{λ^2-0.1469^2}+\frac{0.0008λ^2}{λ^2-0.8270^2}$$

Conditions & Spec sheet

temperature: 161.35 K

Comments

Solid xenon at 161.35 K (-111.80 °C, melting point).

References

E. Grace, A. Butcher, J. Monroe, J. A. Nikkel. Index of refraction, Rayleigh scattering length, and Sellmeier coefficients in solid and liquid argon and xenon, Nucl. Instr. Meth. Phys. Res. A 867, 204-208 (2017)

Data

[Expressions for n]   [CSV - comma separated]   [TXT - tab separated]   [Full database record]

INFO

Xenon, Xe

Xenon (Xe) is a noble gas that exists as a colorless, dense, odorless gas under standard conditions. It's one of the rare gases found in the Earth's atmosphere, representing only a tiny fraction of the air we breathe. Due to its heavy atomic weight and low reactivity, xenon is often used in specialized lighting, including powerful flash lamps, high-intensity arc-lamps, and as the propellant in ion engines for deep space missions. In medicine, xenon has been explored as an anesthetic and in imaging. Its isotopes also find use in various applications, such as the detection of neutrinos in particle physics experiments. Xenon can form compounds, albeit rarely, with highly electronegative elements like fluorine.

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