27 research outputs found

    Vibrational and rotational quenching of CO by collisions with H, He, and H2

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    Collisional quenching of molecular species is an important process in a variety of astrophysical environments including interstellar clouds, photodissociation regions, and cool stellar/planetary atmospheres. In this work, quantum mechanical scattering calculations are presented for the rotational and vibrational relaxation of rotationally-excited CO due to collisions with H, He and H2 for collision energies between 10(exp -6) and approx.15000/cm. The calculations were performed using the close-coupling approach and the l-labeled form of the coupled-states approximation. Cross sections and rate coefficients for the quenching of the v=0-2, j=0-6 levels of CO are presented and comparisons with previous calculations and measurements, where available, are provided

    Rotational quenching of CO due to H2_2 collisions

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    Rate coefficients for state-to-state rotational transitions in CO induced by both para- and ortho-H2_2 collisions are presented. The results were obtained using the close-coupling method and the coupled-states approximation, with the CO-H2_2 interaction potential of Jankowski & Szalewicz (2005). Rate coefficients are presented for temperatures between 1 and 3000 K, and for CO(v=0,jv=0,j) quenching from j=140j=1-40 to all lower jj^\prime levels. Comparisons with previous calculations using an earlier potential show some discrepancies, especially at low temperatures and for rotational transitions involving large Δj|\Delta j|. The differences in the well depths of the van der Waals interactions in the two potential surfaces lead to different resonance structures in the energy dependence of the cross sections which influence the low temperature rate coefficients. Applications to far infrared observations of astrophysical environments are briefly discussed.Comment: 28 pages, 10 figure

    Inelastic, Exchange, and Reactive Processes in Rovibrationally Excited Collisions of HD With H

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    The HD molecule is an important coolant in early universe chemistry models and a tracer of H2 in star-forming regions. Rate coefficients for collisional excitation and de-excitation of HD rotational and vibrational levels form important ingredients in astrophysical models. While collisions with He, H2, and H are the most important, available data for H + HD collisions are largely limited to temperatures less than 1000 K for the vibrational ground state, low-lying rotational levels of the v = 1 HD vibrational level, or computed without reactive contributions. Here, through explicit quantum scattering calculations, we report extensive data for rovibrational transitions in HD induced by H atoms for a range of rotational levels in v = 1 and some v = 0 levels for temperatures up to 1000 K. The significance of the computed results for astrophysical modeling is discussed

    ROVIBRATIONAL BOUND STATES OF THE Ar 2

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    QUANTUM CALCULATION OF INELASTIC CO COLLISIONS WITH H. I. ROTATIONAL QUENCHING OF LOW-LYING ROTATIONAL LEVELS

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    ABSTRACT New quantum scattering calculations for rotational deexcitation transitions of CO induced by H collisions using two CO-H potential energy surfaces (PESs) from Shepler et al. are reported. State-to-state rate coefficients are computed for temperatures ranging from 1 to 3000 K for CO(v = 0, j) deexcitation from j = 1 to 5 to all lower j levels, with j being the rotational quantum number. Different resonance structures in the cross sections are attributed to the differences in the anisotropy and the long-range van der Waals well depths of the two PESs. These differences affect rate coefficients at low temperatures and give an indication of the uncertainty of the results. Significant discrepancies are found between the current rate coefficients and previous results computed using earlier potentials, while the current results satisfy expected propensity rules. Astrophysical applications to modeling far infrared and submillimeter observations are briefly discussed
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