Rayleigh Scattering of Isolated Species

( Species == ions, atoms, molecules )

Scattering is due to the polarization of species. The polarization can be summed from the behavior of individual resonances and damping factors (related to resonance bandwidth), which I have not yet been able to find. For mostly-isolated atoms in high vacuum, Beers line broadening will not be relevant; the bandwidth \gamma is related to damping time, TBD

The scattering from a single resonator at frequency \omega is (from Feynman Lectures on Physics Chapter X page X) proportional to

{ \Large \int{ \omega^4 \over { ( \omega^2 ~-~ \omega_0^2 )^2 ~-~ \gamma^2 \omega^2 } } } ~=~-\left( 2 \omega_0^4 - 2 \omega_0^2 \gamma \left( \sqrt{ 4 \omega_0^2 + \gamma^2 } - 2 \gamma \right) + \gamma^3 \left( \gamma - \sqrt{ 4 \omega_0^2 + \gamma^2 } \right) \right) \tan^{-1} \left( { \Large { \omega \over { \sqrt{ { \huge { \gamma \over 2 } } \left( \sqrt{ 4 \omega_0^2 ~+~ \gamma^2 } ~-~ \gamma \right) ~-~ \omega_0^2 } } } } \right)


\left( \sqrt{ 2 } ~ \gamma \sqrt{ 4 \omega_0^2 + \gamma^2 } \sqrt{ \gamma \left( \sqrt{ 4 \omega_0^2 + \gamma^2 } - \gamma \right) - 2 \omega_0^2 } \right)