4.6 Article

Gas phase Elemental abundances in Molecular cloudS (GEMS) IV. Observational results and statistical trends

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 648, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/202040112

Keywords

astrochemistry; ISM: abundances; ISM: molecules; ISM: clouds; stars: formation; galaxies: ISM

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion [AYA2016-75066-C2-1/2-P, PID2019-106235GB-I00]
  2. MICIU/AEI/FEDER,UE [PGC2018-094671-B-I00]
  3. Spanish FEDER [ESP2017-86582-C4-1-R]
  4. State Research Agency (AEI) [PID2019-105552RB-C41]
  5. European Union [639459]
  6. [PID2019-106027GAC44]
  7. [AYA2017-85111-P]
  8. [PID2019-106110GB-I00]

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Gas phase Elemental abundances in Molecular Clouds (GEMS) is a study aimed at providing estimates of elemental depletions and ionization degree in star-forming filaments. Observations revealed linear correlations among different molecules, leading to the identification of three distinct species families. Results also showed that certain species exhibit correlations with gas temperature and molecular hydrogen density, while others do not show clear trends. The study discusses the potential utility of specific abundance ratios as chemical diagnostics for star formation in external galaxies.
Gas phase Elemental abundances in Molecular CloudS (GEMS) is an IRAM 30 m Large Program designed to provide estimates of the S, C, N, and O depletions and gas ionization degree, X(e(-)), in a selected set of star-forming filaments of Taurus, Perseus, and Orion. Our immediate goal is to build up a complete and large database of molecular abundances that can serve as an observational basis for estimating X(e(-)) and the C, O, N, and S depletions through chemical modeling. We observed and derived the abundances of 14 species ((CO)-C-13, (CO)-O-18, HCO+, (HCO+)-C-13, (HCO+)-O-18, HCN, (HCN)-C-13, HNC, HCS+, CS, SO, (SO)-S-34, H2S, and OCS) in 244 positions, covering the A(V) similar to 3 to similar to 100 mag, n(H-2) similar to a few 10(3) to 10(6) cm(-3), and T-k similar to 10 to similar to 30 K ranges in these clouds, and avoiding protostars, HII regions, and bipolar outflows. A statistical analysis is carried out in order to identify general trends between different species and with physical parameters. Relations between molecules reveal strong linear correlations which define three different families of species: (1) (CO)-C-13 and (CO)-O-18 isotopologs; (2) (HCO+)-C-13, (HCO+)-O-18, H-13 CN, and HNC; and (3) the S-bearing molecules. The abundances of the CO isotopologs increase with the gas kinetic temperature until T-K similar to 15 K. For higher temperatures, the abundance remains constant with a scatter of a factor of similar to 3. The abundances of H-13 CO+, HC18 O+, H-13 CN, and HNC are well correlated with each other, and all of them decrease with molecular hydrogen density, following the law proportional to n(H-2)(-0.8 +/- 0.2). The abundances of S-bearing species also decrease with molecular hydrogen density at a rate of (S-bearing/H)(gas) proportional to n(H-2)(-0.6 +/- 0.1). The abundances of molecules belonging to groups 2 and 3 do not present any clear trend with gas temperature. At scales of molecular clouds, the (CO)-O-18 abundance is the quantity that better correlates with the cloud mass. We discuss the utility of the (CO)-C-13/(CO)-O-18, HCO+/(HCO+)-C-13, and H-13 CO+/(HCN)-C-13 abundance ratios as chemical diagnostics of star formation in external galaxies.

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