Young massive stars regulate the physical conditions, ionization, and fate of their natal molecular cloud and surroundings. It is important to find tracers that help quantifying the stellar feedback processes that take place at different spatial scales. We present ~85 arcmin (~1.3 pc) velocity-resolved maps of several submillimeter molecular lines, taken with /HIFI, toward the closest high-mass star-forming region, the Orion molecular cloud 1 core (OMC-1). The observed rotational lines include probes of warm and dense molecular gas that are difficult, if not impossible, to detect from ground-based telescopes: CH ( = 1-0), CO ( = 10-9), HCO ( = 6-5) and HCN ( = 6-5), and CH (, =1, 3/2-1, 1/2). These lines trace an extended but thin layer ( ≃3-6 mag or ~10 cm) of molecular gas at high thermal pressure, = · ≈ 10 - 10 cm K, associated with the far ultraviolet (FUV) irradiated surface of OMC-1. The intense FUV radiation field, emerging from massive stars in the Trapezium cluster, heats, compresses and photoevaporates the cloud edge. It also triggers the formation of specific reactive molecules such as CH. We find that the CH ( = 1-0) emission spatially correlates with the flux of FUV photons impinging the cloud: from ~10 to ~10. This correlation is supported by constant-pressure photodissociation region (PDR) models in the parameter space / ≈ [5 · 10 - 8 · 10] cm K where many observed PDRs seem to lie. The CH ( = 1-0) emission spatially correlates with the extended infrared emission from vibrationally excited H ( ≥ 1), and with that of [C ii] 158 μm and CO = 10-9, all emerging from FUV-irradiated gas. These correlations link the presence of CH to the availability of C ions and of FUV-pumped H ( ≥ 1) molecules. We conclude that the parsec-scale CH emission and narrow-line (Δv ≃ 3 km s) mid- CO emission arises from extended PDR gas and not from fast shocks. PDR line tracers are the smoking gun of the stellar feedback from young massive stars. The PDR cloud surface component in OMC-1, with a mass density of 120-240 pc, represents ~5% to ~10% of the total gas mass, however, it dominates the emitted line luminosity; the average CO = 10-9 surface luminosity in the mapped region being ~35 times brighter than that of CO = 2-1. These results provide insights into the source of submillimeter CH and mid- CO emission from distant star-forming galaxies.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201834409 | DOI Listing |
Environ Monit Assess
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Global Reef, Koh Tao, Thailand.
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School of Physics, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia.
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Queensland Unit for Advanced Shoulder Research (QUASR), Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, QLD, Australia; Greenslopes Private Hospital, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
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November 2024
Cahill Center for Astronomy and Astrophysics, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, USA.
Fast radio bursts (FRBs) are millisecond-duration events detected from beyond the Milky Way. FRB emission characteristics favour highly magnetized neutron stars, or magnetars, as the sources, as evidenced by FRB-like bursts from a galactic magnetar, and the star-forming nature of FRB host galaxies. However, the processes that produce FRB sources remain unknown.
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Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA, USA.
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