The formal solution of the SSRTE is performed along the characteristic
rays on a mesh ,
of discrete shells using the
short-characteristic (SC) method of Olson and Kunasz [24] with
piece-wise parabolic or linear interpolation. The characteristic rays are
curved in the case of the SSRTE and have to be calculated before the
solution of the radiative transfer equation proceeds (see [1]
for details). Improvements in this method [1,25] include
an improved angle integration using generalized Simpson-quadrature and
a generalization of the approximate
-operator to an arbitrary number
of bands below and above the main diagonal (up to the full
-operator).
We describe here the general procedure of calculating the with
arbitrary bandwidth, up to the full
-operator, for the
SC method in spherical symmetry [25]. Although we consider the
SSRTE as given in the previous section, the same procedure applies for
radiative transfer problems in static media or in (static or moving)
media with plane-parallel symmetry. The specialization of the formulae
given in this section is straightforward.
The formal solution along a characteristic of the SSRTE (hereafter, a
``ray'') is done using a polynomial interpolation of the source
function, S, along the ray. For reasons of numerical stability, we
use linear or quadratic interpolation of S along each ray,
although this is not required by the method. This leads to the
following expressions for the specific intensity along a
ray (cf. Ref. [24] for a derivation of the formulae):
We describe the construction of for arbitrary bandwidth using
the example of a characteristic that is tangential to an arbitrary shell:
Ray k is the ray that is
tangent to shell k+1
The intersection points (including the point of
tangency) are labeled from left to right, the direction in which the
formal solution proceeds. Ray k has 2k+1 points of
intersection with discrete shells
. To compute row j of
the discrete
-operator (or
-matrix),
,we sequentially label the intersection points of the ray k with the
shell i, and define auxiliary
quantities
and
as follows:
Using the and
, we can now write the
-Matrix as