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A&A 417, 993-1002 (2004)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20035629
H
and other species in the diffuse cloud towards
Persei: A new detailed model
F. Le Petit1, 2, E. Roueff1 and E. Herbst3
1 Observatoire de Paris-Meudon, LUTH, 5 place Jules Janssen, 92190 Meudon, France
2 Onsala Space Observatory, 439 92 Onsala, Sweden
3 Departments of Physics, Chemistry, and Astronomy, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210, USA
(Received 5 November 2003 / Accepted 7 January 2004 )
Abstract
McCall et al. have recently shown that a large column
density for the molecular ion H
3+ of
8
10
13 cm
-2 exists in the classical diffuse cloud towards
Persei. They have used this observation to infer that the cosmic ray ionization rate
for this source is approximately 40 times larger than previously assumed. But, although the value of
they infer (
1.2
10
-15 s
-1) can explain the abundance of H
3+, it is not at all clear that such a high ionization rate is consistent with the many other detailed atomic and molecular
observations made along the same line of sight. In particular, the abundances of the species OH and HD were previously used
to determine a much lower ionization rate. In this paper, we report a detailed chemical model of the diffuse cloud towards
Persei which appears to fit to a reasonable extent both the older atomic and molecular observations and the new detection
of H
3+. We consider two phases - a long (4 pc) diffuse region at 60 K and a tiny (
100 AU) dense region at 20 K, both with
an ionization rate
in between the standard value and that advocated by McCall et al. The model reproduces almost all abundances, including that
of H
3+, to within a factor of
three or better. To reproduce the CH
+ abundance and those of the excited rotational populations of H
2, we consider the addition of shocks. This phase has little effect on
our calculated abundance for H
3+.
Key words: molecular processes -- ISM: cosmic rays -- ISM: abundances -- ISM: molecules -- ISM: general
Offprint request: F. Le Petit, Franck.LePetit@obspm.fr
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