A&A 366, 662-667 (2001)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20000244
Polyatomic species in diffuse cloud and clump interfaces
T. K. Nguyen1, T. W. Hartquist2 and D. A. Williams11 Department of Physics and Astronomy, University College London, Gower Street, London, WC1E 6BT, UK
2 Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK
(Received 6 June 2000 / Accepted 13 November 2000)
Abstract
Diffuse clouds embedded in a flowing intercloud medium will develop
warm interface layers in which the thermal pressures should significantly
exceed those within the cloud. We have investigated the gas-phase
formation of polyatomic molecules within such warm interfaces. If an
interface occupies a few percent of the total molecular column density
along that line-of-sight, then many polyatomic species in that interface
should have detectable abundances.
We have compared the results of interface models with observational data
on polyatomic species obtained by Liszt and Lucas. Some models give
results that are in harmony with measured ratios of several species
including C2H, HCO+ and OH; these models have background radiation
fields intensities that are lower than the standard by an order of
magnitude. The number densities of molecular hydrogen are of the order of
102 cm-3 in regions with temperatures of several thousand degrees.
Such conditions in an interface do not conflict with the lower pressures
inferred from CO data, as most of the CO is expected to be in the cold
bulk of the material rather than in interfaces. The constancy of the sum
of MHD wave "pressure" and thermal pressure implies higher thermal
pressures in interfaces than in the cold cloud and cold clump material.
The radiation and thermal pressure conditions required to explain the
observed abundance ratios may be more likely in interfaces around diffuse
clumps within Giant Molecular Clouds than those around the isolated
"field" diffuse clouds observed in ultraviolet absorption. Some
measured abundance ratios, the most notable of which is that of the
abundances of H2CO and HCO+, are not well matched by model results,
though on the basis of the models the relevant species would be expected
to be observable in some cases. It is possible that the adopted chemical
network is incomplete.
Key words: ISM: abundances; clouds; molecules
Offprint request: T. K. Nguyen, tkn@star.ucl.ac.uk
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