Abstract
CO observations in active galactic nuclei and starbursts reveal high
kinetic temperatures. Those environments are thought to be very
turbulent due to dynamic phenomena, such as outflows and high supernova
rates. We investigate the effect of mechanical heating on atomic
fine-structure and molecular lines and on their ratios. We try to use
those ratios as a diagnostic to constrain the amount of mechanical
heating in an object and also study its significance on estimating the
H2 mass. Equilibrium photodissociation models (PDRs
hereafter) were used to compute the thermal and chemical balance for the
clouds. The equilibria were solved for numerically using the optimized
version of the Leiden PDR-XDR code. Large velocity-gradient calculations
were done as post-processing on the output of the PDR models using
RADEX. High-J CO line ratios are very sensitive to mechanical heating
(Γmech hereafter). These emission becomes at least one
order of magnitude brighter in clouds with n ~ 105
cm-3 and a star formation rate of 1 M⊙
yr-1 (corresponding to Γmech = 2 ×
10-19 erg cm-3 s-1). The emission of
low-J CO lines is not as sensitive to Γmech, but they
do become brighter in response to Γmech. Generally, for
all of the lines we considered, Γmech increases
excitation temperatures and decreases the optical depth at the line
centre. Hence line ratios are also affected, strongly in some cases.
Ratios involving HCN are a good diagnostic for Γmech,
where the HCN(1-0)/CO(1-0) increases from 0.06 to 0.25, and the
HCN(1-0)/HCO+(1-0) increase from 0.15 to 0.5 for amounts of
Γmech that are equivalent to 5% of the surface heating
rate. Both ratios increase to more than 1 for higher
Γmech, as opposed to being much less than unity in pure
PDRs. The first major conclusion is that low-J to high-J intensity
ratios will yield a good estimate of the mechanical heating rate (as
opposed to only low-J ratios). The second one is that the mechanical
heating rate should be taken into account when determing AV
or, equivalently, NH, and consequently the cloud mass.
Ignoring Γmech will also lead to large errors in
density and radiation field estimates.
Appendices are available in electronic form at http://www.aanda.orgThe
data used to generate all the grids are only available at the CDS via
anonymous ftp to http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr
(ftp://130.79.128.5) or via http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/qcat?J/A+A/574/A127
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | A127 |
| Number of pages | 33 |
| Journal | Astronomy & Astrophysics |
| Volume | 574 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 1-Feb-2015 |
Keywords
- galaxies: ISM
- photon-dominated region
- turbulence
- ISM: molecules
- ISM: clouds
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Photodissociation with mechanical heating
Kazandjian, M. V. (Contributor), Meijerink, R. (Contributor), Pelupessy, I. (Contributor), Israel, F. P. (Contributor) & Spaans, M. (Contributor), Strasbourg Astronomical Data Center, 5-Feb-2015
DOI: 10.26093/cds/vizier.35740127
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