4.7 Article

The Role of Neutral Hydrogen in Setting the Abundances of Molecular Species in the Milky Way's Diffuse Interstellar Medium. I. Observational Constraints from ALMA and NOEMA

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 928, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/ac5035

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF from the NRAO [SOSPA6-023]
  2. Vilas funding by the University of Wisconsin
  3. John Simon Guggenheim fellowship
  4. IRAM NOEMA Interferometer [W19AQ, S20AB]
  5. MPG (Germany)
  6. IGN (Spain)
  7. INSU/CNRS (France)

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In this study, we complemented existing observations of H i absorption with new observations of HCO+, C2H, HCN, and HNC absorption. The results show that the formation of diffuse molecular gas requires certain atomic gas conditions. Molecular gas is associated with specific structures that have particular optical depth, spin temperature, and turbulent Mach number.
We have complemented existing observations of H i absorption with new observations of HCO+, C2H, HCN, and HNC absorption from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array and the Northern Extended Millimeter Array in the directions of 20 background radio continuum sources with 4 degrees <= divide b divide <= 81 degrees to constrain the atomic gas conditions that are suitable for the formation of diffuse molecular gas. We find that these molecular species form along sightlines where A ( V ) greater than or similar to 0.25, consistent with the threshold for the H i-to-H-2 transition at solar metallicity. Moreover, we find that molecular gas is associated only with structures that have an H i optical depth >0.1, a spin temperature <80 K, and a turbulent Mach number greater than or similar to 2. We also identify a broad, faint component to the HCO+ absorption in a majority of sightlines. Compared to the velocities where strong, narrow HCO+ absorption is observed, the H i at these velocities has a lower cold neutral medium fraction and negligible CO emission. The relative column densities and linewidths of the different molecular species observed here are similar to those observed in previous experiments over a range of Galactic latitudes, suggesting that gas in the solar neighborhood and gas in the Galactic plane are chemically similar. For a select sample of previously observed sightlines, we show that the absorption line profiles of HCO+, HCN, HNC, and C2H are stable over periods of similar to 3 yr and similar to 25 yr, likely indicating that molecular gas structures in these directions are at least greater than or similar to 100 au in size.

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