Abstract
Theoretical surface brightness profiles of spherical dark nebulae of both uniform density and a density proportional to 1/r squared are being discussed. The albedo and asymmetry factor of the dust grains and the optical radius measured from the cloud center were the variable parameters in this study, which further assumed an isotropically incident radiation field. The occurrence of dark cores in the surface brightness profiles is examined, and their frequent existence in galactic dark nebulae is interpreted as resulting from a strongly forward scattering phase function and a high optical depth of the associated objects. The shape and depth of the profiles of the dark cores is closely related to the internal density distribution of the clouds, and it is suggested that detailed observations of the surface brightness profiles of dark nebulae will reveal important information on the type of their internal density distribution and, thus, their evolutionary status.
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