We report observations of molecular oxygen (O2) rotational transitions at
487 GHz, 774 GHz, and 1121 GHz toward Orion Peak A. The O2 lines at 487 GHz and
774 GHz are detected at velocities of 10-12 km/s with line widths 3 km/s;
however, the transition at 1121 GHz is not detected. The observed line
characteristics, combined with the results of earlier observations, suggest
that the region responsible for the O2 emission is 9" (6e16 cm) in size, and
is located close to the H2 Peak 1position (where vibrationally-excited H2
emission peaks), and not at Peak A, 23" away. The peak O2 column density is
1.1e18/cm2. The line velocity is close to that of 621 GHz water maser emission
found in this portion of the Orion Molecular Cloud, and having a shock with
velocity vector lying nearly in the plane of the sky is consistent with
producing maximum maser gain along the line-of-sight. The enhanced O2
abundance compared to that generally found in dense interstellar clouds can be
explained by passage of a low-velocity C-shock through a clump with preshock
density 2e4/cm3, if a reasonable flux of UV radiation is present. The postshock
O2 can explain the emission from the source if its line of sight dimension
is ~10 times larger than its size on the plane of the sky. The special geometry
and conditions required may explain why O2 emission has not been detected in
the cores of other massive star-forming molecular clouds.Comment: 28 pages, 13 figure