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Unveiling the chemistry of interstellar CH: Spectroscopy of the 2 THz $N=2\leftarrow 1$ ground state line

Authors :
Wiesemeyer, Helmut
Güsten, Rolf
Menten, Karl M.
Durán, Carlos A.
Csengeri, Timea
Jacob, Arshia M.
Simon, Robert
Stutzki, Jürgen
Wyrowski, Friedrich
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

The methylidyne radical CH is commonly used as a proxy for H$_2$ in the cold, neutral phase of the interstellar medium. The optical spectroscopy of CH is limited by interstellar extinction, whereas far-infrared observations provide an integral view through the Galaxy. While the HF ground state absorption, another H$_2$ proxy in diffuse gas, frequently suffers from saturation, CH remains transparent both in spiral-arm crossings and high-mass star forming regions, turning this light hydride into a universal surrogate for H$_2$. However, in slow shocks and in regions dissipating turbulence its abundance is expected to be enhanced by an endothermic production path, and the idea of a "canonical" CH abundance needs to be addressed. The $N=2\leftarrow 1$ ground state transition of CH at $\lambda 149\,\mu$m has become accessible to high-resolution spectroscopy thanks to GREAT aboard SOFIA. Its unsaturated absorption and the absence of emission makes it an ideal candidate for the determination of column densities with a minimum of assumptions. Here we present an analysis of four sightlines towards distant, far-infrared bright Galactic star forming regions. If combined with the sub-millimeter line of CH at $\lambda 560\,\mu$m, environments forming massive stars can be analyzed. For this we present a case study on the "proto-Trapezium" cluster W3 IRS5, and demonstrate that the sub-millimeter/far-infrared lines of CH reliably trace not only diffuse but also dense, molecular gas. While we confirm the global correlation between the column densities of HF and those of CH, clear signposts of an over-abundance of CH are observed towards lower densities. A quiescent ion-neutral chemistry alone cannot account for this over-abundance. Vortices forming in turbulent, diffuse gas may be the setting for an enhanced production path.<br />Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1804.04707
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201731810