401 research outputs found
Chemical Analysis of a Diffuse Cloud along a Line of Sight Toward W51: Molecular Fraction and Cosmic-Ray Ionization Rate
Absorption lines from the molecules OH+, H2O+, and H3+ have been observed in
a diffuse molecular cloud along a line of sight near W51 IRS2. We present the
first chemical analysis that combines the information provided by all three of
these species. Together, OH+ and H2O+ are used to determine the molecular
hydrogen fraction in the outskirts of the observed cloud, as well as the
cosmic-ray ionization rate of atomic hydrogen. H3+ is used to infer the
cosmic-ray ionization rate of H2 in the molecular interior of the cloud, which
we find to be zeta_2=(4.8+-3.4)x10^-16 per second. Combining the results from
all three species we find an efficiency factor---defined as the ratio of the
formation rate of OH+ to the cosmic-ray ionization rate of H---of
epsilon=0.07+-0.04, much lower than predicted by chemical models. This is an
important step in the future use of OH+ and H2O+ on their own as tracers of the
cosmic-ray ionization rate.Comment: 21 pages, 1 figure, 4 table
Absorption Line Observations of H and CO in Sight Lines Toward the Vela and W28 Supernova Remnants
Supernova remnants act as particle accelerators, providing the cosmic-ray
protons that permeate the interstellar medium and initiate the ion-molecule
reactions that drive interstellar chemistry. Enhanced fluxes of cosmic-ray
protons in close proximity to supernova remnants have been inferred from
observations tracing particle interactions with nearby molecular gas. Here I
present observations of H and CO absorption, molecules that serve as
tracers of the cosmic-ray ionization rate and gas density, respectively, in
sight lines toward the W28 and Vela supernova remnants. Cosmic-ray ionization
rates inferred from these observations range from about 2--10 times the average
value in Galactic diffuse clouds ( s), suggesting
that the gas being probed is experiencing an elevated particle flux. While it
is difficult to constrain the line-of-sight location of the absorbing gas with
respect to the supernova remnants, these results are consistent with a scenario
where cosmic rays are diffusing away from the acceleration site and producing
enhanced ionization rates in the surrounding medium.Comment: 26 pages, 6 figures, 4 tables; accepted for publication in Ap
Investigating the Cosmic-Ray Ionization Rate in the Galactic Diffuse Interstellar Medium through Observations of H3+
Observations of H3+ in the Galactic diffuse interstellar medium (ISM) have
led to various surprising results, including the conclusion that the cosmic-ray
ionization rate (zeta_2) is about 1 order of magnitude larger than previously
thought. The present survey expands the sample of diffuse cloud sight lines
with H3+ observations to 50, with detections in 21 of those. Ionization rates
inferred from these observations are in the range (1.7+-1.3)x10^-16
s^-1<zeta_2<(10.6+-8.2)x10^-16 s^-1 with a mean value of
zeta_2=(3.5^+5.3_-3.0)x10^-16 s^-1. Upper limits (3 sigma) derived from
non-detections of H3+ are as low as zeta_2<0.4x10^-16 s^-1. These low
upper-limits, in combination with the wide range of inferred cosmic-ray
ionization rates, indicate variations in zeta_2 between different diffuse cloud
sight lines. A study of zeta_2 versus N_H (total hydrogen column density) shows
that the two parameters are not correlated for diffuse molecular cloud sight
lines, but that the ionization rate decreases when N_H increases to values
typical of dense molecular clouds. Both the difference in ionization rates
between diffuse and dense clouds and the variation of zeta_2 among diffuse
cloud sight lines are likely the result of particle propagation effects. The
lower ionization rate in dense clouds is due to the inability of low-energy
(few MeV) protons to penetrate such regions, while the ionization rate in
diffuse clouds is controlled by the proximity of the observed cloud to a site
of particle acceleration.Comment: 48 pages, 19 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in Ap
The 7Li/6Li Isotope Ratio Near the Supernova Remnant IC 443
We present an analysis of 7Li/6Li isotope ratios along four sight lines that
probe diffuse molecular gas near the supernova remnant IC 443. Recent gamma-ray
observations have revealed the presence of shock-accelerated cosmic rays
interacting with the molecular cloud surrounding the remnant. Our results
indicate that the 7Li/6Li ratio is lower in regions more strongly affected by
these interactions, a sign of recent Li production by cosmic rays. We find that
7Li/6Li ~ 7 toward HD 254755, which is located just outside the visible edge of
IC 443, while 7Li/6Li ~ 3 along the line of sight to HD 43582, which probes the
interior region of the supernova remnant. No evidence of 7Li synthesis by
neutrino-induced spallation is found in material presumably contaminated by the
ejecta of a core-collapse supernova. The lack of a neutrino signature in the
7Li/6Li ratios near IC 443 is consistent with recent models of Galactic
chemical evolution, which suggest that the nu-process plays only a minor role
in Li production.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, emulateapj style, accepted for publication in ApJ
Letter
First Time-dependent Study of H2 and H3+ Ortho-Para Chemistry in the Diffuse Interstellar Medium: Observations Meet Theoretical Predictions
The chemistry in the diffuse interstellar medium initiates the gradual
increase of molecular complexity during the life cycle of matter. A key
molecule that enables build-up of new molecular bonds and new molecules via
proton-donation is H3+. Its evolution is tightly related to molecular hydrogen
and thought to be well understood. However, recent observations of ortho and
para lines of H2 and H3+ in the diffuse ISM showed a puzzling discrepancy in
nuclear spin excitation temperatures and populations between these two key
species. H3+, unlike H2, seems to be out of thermal equilibrium, contrary to
the predictions of modern astrochemical models. We conduct the first
time-dependent modeling of the para-fractions of H2 and H3+ in the diffuse ISM
and compare our results to a set of line-of-sight observations, including new
measurements presented in this study. We isolate a set of key reactions for H3+
and find that the destruction of the lowest rotational states of H3+ by
dissociative recombination largely control its ortho/para ratio. A plausible
agreement with observations cannot be achieved unless a ratio larger than 1:5
for the destruction of (1,1)- and (1,0)-states of H3+ is assumed. Additionally,
an increased CR ionization rate to 10(-15) 1/s further improves the fit whereas
variations of other individual physical parameters, such as density and
chemical age, have only a minor effect on the predicted ortho/para ratios. Thus
our study calls for new laboratory measurements of the dissociative
recombination rate and branching ratio of the key ion H3+ under interstellar
conditions.Comment: 27 pages, 6 figures, 3 table
Cosmic-ray and X-ray Heating of Interstellar Clouds and Protoplanetary Disks
Cosmic-ray and X-ray heating are derived from the electron energy loss
calculations of Dalgarno, Yan and Liu for hydrogen-helium gas mixtures. These
authors treated the heating from elastic scattering and collisional
de-excitation of rotationally excited hydrogen molecules. Here we consider the
heating that can arise from all ionization and excitation processes, with
particular emphasis on the reactions of cosmic-ray and X-ray generated ions
with the heavy neutral species, which we refer to as chemical heating. In
molecular regions, chemical heating dominates and can account for 50 per cent
of the energy expended in the creation of an ion pair. The heating per ion pair
ranges in the limit of negligible electron fraction from about 4.3 eV for
diffuse atomic gas, to about 13 eV for the moderately dense regions of
molecular clouds and to about 18 eV for the very dense regions of
protoplanetary disks. An important general conclusion of this study is that
cosmic-ray and X-ray heating depends on the physical properties of the medium,
i.e., on the molecular and electron fractions, the total density of hydrogen
nuclei, and to a lesser extent on the temperature. It is also noted that
chemical heating, the dominant process for cosmic-ray and X-ray heating, plays
a role in UV irradiated molecular gas.Comment: 39 pages, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
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