4.6 Article

First hyperfine resolved far-infrared OH spectrum from a star-forming region

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 531, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201116893

Keywords

astrochemistry; stars: formation; ISM: magnetic fields; ISM: jets and outflows; ISM: individual objects: W3 IRS 5

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [200020-113556]

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OH is an important molecule in the H2O chemistry and the cooling budget of star-forming regions. The goal of the Herschel key program Water In Star-forming regions with Herschel (WISH) is to study H2O and related species during protostellar evolution. Our aim in this Letter is to assess the origin of the OH emission from star-forming regions and constrain the properties of the emitting gas. High-resolution observations of the OH (II1/2)-I-2 J = 3/2-1/2 triplet at 1837.8 GHz (163.1 mu m) towards the high-mass star-forming region W3 IRS 5 with the Heterodyne Instrument for the Far-Infrared (HIFI) on Herschel reveal the first hyperfine velocity-resolved OH far-infrared spectrum of a star-forming region. The line profile of the OH emission shows two components: a narrow component (FWHM approximate to 4-5 km s(-1)) with partially resolved hyperfine structure resides on top of a broad (FWHM approximate to 30 km s(-1)) component. The narrow emission agrees well with results from radiative transfer calculations of a spherical envelope model for W3 IRS 5 with a constant OH abundance of x(OH) approximate to 8 x 10(-9). Comparison with H2O yields OH/H2O abundance ratios of around 10(-3) for T greater than or similar to 100 K and around unity for T less than or similar to 100 K, consistent with the current picture of the dense cloud chemistry with freeze-out and photodesorption. The broad component is attributed to outflow emission. An abundance ratio of OH/H2O greater than or similar to 0.028 in the outflow is derived from comparison with results of water line modeling. This ratio can be explained by a fast J-type shock or a slower UV-irradiated C-type shock.

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