4.7 Article

The CH+ abundance in turbulent, diffuse molecular clouds

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 453, Issue 3, Pages 2747-2758

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stv1782

Keywords

astrochemistry; ISM: abundances; ISM: clouds

Funding

  1. NASA through NASA ATP [NNX09AK31G, NNX13AB84G]
  2. NSF [AST-0908553, AST-1211729]
  3. US Department of Energy at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory [LLNL-B569409]
  4. National Center of Supercomputing Application [TG-MCA00N020]
  5. NASA [476434, 114137, NNX13AB84G, NNX09AK31G] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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The intermittent dissipation of interstellar turbulence is an important energy source in the diffuse interstellar medium. Though on average smaller than the heating rates due to cosmic rays and the photoelectric effect on dust grains, the turbulent cascade can channel large amounts of energy into a relatively small fraction of the gas that consequently undergoes significant heating and chemical enrichment. In particular, this mechanism has been proposed as a solution to the long-standing problem of the high abundance of CH+ along diffuse molecular sight lines, which steady-state, low-temperature models underproduce by over an order of magnitude. While much work has been done on the structure and chemistry of these small-scale dissipation zones, comparatively little attention has been paid to relating these zones to the properties of the large-scale turbulence. In this paper, we attempt to bridge this gap by estimating the temperature and CH+ column density along diffuse molecular sight lines by post-processing three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic(s) turbulence simulations. Assuming reasonable values for the cloud density ((n) over bar (H) = 30 cm(-3)), size (L = 20 pc), and velocity dispersion (sigma(v) = 2.3 km s(-1)), we find that our computed abundances compare well with CH+ column density observations, as well as with observations of emission lines from rotationally excited H-2 molecules.

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