4.7 Article

Influence of galactic arm scale dynamics on the molecular composition of the cold and dense ISM - II. Molecular oxygen abundance

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 486, Issue 3, Pages 4198-4202

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stz1122

Keywords

astrochemistry; ISM: abundances; ISM: clouds; ISM: evolution; ISM: molecules

Funding

  1. ERC Starting Grant (3DICE) [336474]
  2. Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales (CNES)
  3. European Research Council
  4. BIS National E-Infrastructure capital grant [ST/K000373/1]
  5. STFC DiRAC Operations grant [ST/K0003259/1]

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Molecular oxygen has been the subject of many observational searches as chemical models predicted it to be a reservoir of oxygen. Although it has been detected in two regions of the interstellar medium, its rarity is a challenge for astrochemical models. In this paper, we have combined the physical conditions computed with smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations with our full gas-grain chemical model Nautilus, to study the predicted O-2 abundance in interstellar material forming cold cores. We thus follow the chemical evolution of gas and ices in parcels of material from the diffuse interstellar conditions to the cold dense cores. Most of our predicted O-2 abundances are below 10(-8) (with respect to the total proton density) and the predicted column densities in simulated cold cores are at maximum a few 10(-14) cm(-2), in agreement with the non-detection limits. This low O-2 abundance can be explained by the fact that, in a large fraction of the interstellar material, the atomic oxygen is depleted on to the grain surface (and hydrogenated to form H2O) before O-2 can be formed in the gas-phase and protected from ultraviolet photodissociations. We could achieve this result only because we took into account the full history of the evolution of the physical conditions from the diffuse medium to the cold cores.

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