2025 年 20 巻 p. 2101008
Broadening of hydrogenic spectral lines is an important tool in spectroscopic diagnostics of various laboratory and astrophysical plasmas. We review recent analytical advances in five areas. First, we review a new method for spectroscopic diagnostics of tokamak edge plasmas based on a peculiar Stark broadening of hydrogen or deuterium spectral lines emitted by the injected neutral beam. Second, we review the analytical solution for the magnetic-field-caused narrowing of hydrogenic spectral lines under a circularly polarized electromagnetic wave. Third, we review analytical results concerning the Stark-Zeeman broadening of the Lyman-alpha line in plasmas. Forth, we review the effect of helical trajectories of electrons in strongly magnetized plasmas on the width of hydrogen/deuterium spectral lines. Fifth, we review recent analytical advances in the area of the intra-Stark spectroscopy: three different new methods, based on the emergent phenomenon of the Langmuir-wave-caused structures (“L-dips”) in the line profiles, for measuring super-strong magnetic fields of the GigaGauss range developing during relativistic laser-plasma interactions. We also review the rich physics behind the L-dips phenomenon – because there was a confusion in the literature in this regard.