A Chapman function describes the integration of atmospheric absorption along a slant path on a spherical Earth, relative to the vertical case. It applies to any quantity with a concentration decreasing exponentially with increasing altitude. To a first approximation, valid at small zenith angles, the Chapman function for optical absorption is equal to
where z is the zenith angle and sec denotes the secant function.
The Chapman function is named after Sydney Chapman, who introduced the function in 1931.[1]
In an isothermal model of the atmosphere, the density ϱ ( h ) {\textstyle \varrho (h)} varies exponentially with altitude h {\textstyle h} according to the Barometric formula:
where ϱ 0 {\textstyle \varrho _{0}} denotes the density at sea level ( h = 0 {\textstyle h=0} ) and H {\textstyle H} the so-called scale height. The total amount of matter traversed by a vertical ray starting at altitude h {\textstyle h} towards infinity is given by the integrated density ("column depth")
For inclined rays having a zenith angle z {\textstyle z} , the integration is not straight-forward due to the non-linear relationship between altitude and path length when considering the curvature of Earth. Here, the integral reads
where we defined s = h + R E {\textstyle s=h+R_{\mathrm {E} }} ( R E {\textstyle R_{\mathrm {E} }} denotes the Earth radius).
The Chapman function ch ( x , z ) {\textstyle \operatorname {ch} (x,z)} is defined as the ratio between slant depth X z {\textstyle X_{z}} and vertical column depth X 0 {\textstyle X_{0}} . Defining x = s / H {\textstyle x=s/H} , it can be written as
A number of different integral representations have been developed in the literature. Chapman's original representation reads[1]
Huestis[2] developed the representation
which does not suffer from numerical singularities present in Chapman's representation.
For z = π / 2 {\textstyle z=\pi /2} (horizontal incidence), the Chapman function reduces to[3]
Here, K 1 ( x ) {\textstyle K_{1}(x)} refers to the modified Bessel function of the second kind of the first order. For large values of x {\textstyle x} , this can further be approximated by
For x → ∞ {\textstyle x\rightarrow \infty } and 0 ≤ z < π / 2 {\textstyle 0\leq z<\pi /2} , the Chapman function converges to the secant function:
In practical applications related to the terrestrial atmosphere, where x ∼ 1000 {\textstyle x\sim 1000} , ch ( x , z ) ≈ sec z {\textstyle \operatorname {ch} (x,z)\approx \sec z} is a good approximation for zenith angles up to 60° to 70°, depending on the accuracy required.