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Polarization modulation ellipsometry has been used to determine the optical functions of silicon at elevated temperatures up to 1000 K. The E₁, E₀^', and E₂ features move monotonically to lower energies as the temperature is increased. A fit of the E₀^' and E₂ peak positions to the empirical formulation of Varshni is obtained; it is found that the critical points of the joint density of states for the E₀^' and E₂ gaps move somewhat differently from the indirect gap, although the difference is not large.
Jellison et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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