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The water abundance behind interstellar shocks: results from HerschelHerschel/PACS and SpitzerSpitzer/IRS observations of H2_2O, CO, and H2_2

Abstract

We have investigated the water abundance in shock-heated molecular gas, making use of HerschelHerschel measurements of far-infrared CO and H2_2O line emissions in combination with SpitzerSpitzer measurements of mid-IR H2_2 rotational emissions. We present far-infrared line spectra obtained with HerschelHerschel's PACS instrument in range spectroscopy mode towards two positions in the protostellar outflow NGC 2071 and one position each in the supernova remnants W28 and 3C391. These spectra provide unequivocal detections, at one or more positions, of 12 rotational lines of water, 14 rotational lines of CO, 8 rotational lines of OH (4 lambda doublets), and 7 fine-structure transitions of atoms or atomic ions. We first used a simultaneous fit to the CO line fluxes, along with H2_2 rotational line fluxes measured previously by SpitzerSpitzer, to constrain the temperature and density distribution within the emitting gas; and we then investigated the water abundances implied by the observed H2_2O line fluxes. The water line fluxes are in acceptable agreement with standard theoretical models for nondissociative shocks that predict the complete vaporization of grain mantles in shocks of velocity v25v \sim 25 km/s, behind which the characteristic gas temperature is 1300\sim 1300 K and the H2_2O/CO ratio is 1.2Comment: 42 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa

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