4.7 Article

EFFECTIVE DESTRUCTION OF CO BY COSMIC RAYS: IMPLICATIONS FOR TRACING H2 GAS IN THE UNIVERSE

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 803, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/803/1/37

Keywords

astrochemistry; cosmic rays; galaxies: ISM; ISM: abundances; methods: numerical; photon-dominated region (PDR)

Funding

  1. STFC [ST/J001511/1]
  2. Ernest Rutherford Fellowship
  3. BIS National E-infrastructure capital [ST/K001590/1]
  4. STFC capital [ST/H008861/1, ST/H00887X/1]
  5. STFC DiRAC Operations [ST/K00333X/1]
  6. STFC [ST/M001334/1, ST/K001590/1, ST/H00887X/1, ST/J00359X/1, ST/K00333X/1, ST/J001511/1, ST/H008861/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  7. Science and Technology Facilities Council [ST/M001334/1, ST/H00887X/1, ST/J00359X/1, ST/H008861/1, ST/K001590/1, ST/J001511/1, ST/K00333X/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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We report on the effects of cosmic rays (CRs) on the abundance of CO in H-2 clouds under conditions typical for star-forming galaxies in the universe. We discover that this most important molecule for tracing H2 gas is very effectively destroyed in ISM environments with CR energy densities U-CR similar to (50-10(3)) x U-CR,(Gal), a range expected in numerous star-forming systems throughout the universe. This density-dependent effect operates volumetrically rather than only on molecular cloud surfaces (i.e., unlike FUV radiation that also destroys CO), and is facilitated by (a) the direct destruction of CO by CRs and (b) a reaction channel activated by CR-produced He+. The effect we uncover is strong enough to render Milky-Way-type Giant Molecular Clouds very CO-poor (and thus CO-untraceable), even in ISM environments with rather modestly enhanced average CR energy densities of U-CR similar to (10-50) x U-CR, (Gal). We conclude that the CR-induced destruction of CO in molecular clouds, unhindered by dust absorption, is perhaps the single most important factor controlling the CO-visibility of molecular gas in vigorously star-forming galaxies. We anticipate that a second-order effect of this CO destruction mechanism will be to make the H2 distribution in the gas-rich disks of such galaxies appear much clumpier in CO J = 1-0, 2-1 line emission than it actually is. Finally we give an analytical approximation of the CO/H-2 abundance ratio as a function of gas density and CR energy density for use in galaxy-size or cosmological hydrodynamical simulations, and propose some key observational tests.

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