Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

earth and planetary sciences

Revealing the CO X-factor in Dark Molecular Gas through Sensitive ALMA Absorption Observations

Astrophysical Journal Letters, Volume 889, No. 1, Article L4, Year 2020

Carbon-bearing molecules, particularly CO, have been widely used as tracers of molecular gas in the interstellar medium (ISM). In this work, we aim to study the properties of molecules in diffuse, cold environments, where CO tends to be underabundant and/or subthermally excited. We performed one of the most sensitive (down to ALT="${\tau } {\mathrm{rms}} {\mathrm{CO}}\sim 0.002$" SRC="apjlab6337ieqn1.gif"/ and ALT="${\tau } {\mathrm{rms}} {{\mathrm{HCO}} {+}sim 0.0008$" SRC="apjlab6337ieqn2.gif"/ ) submillimeter molecular absorption line observations toward 13 continuum sources with the ALMA. CO absorption was detected in diffuse ISM down to ALT="${A} {{\rm{v}}}\lt 0.32\,\mathrm{mag}$" SRC="apjlab6337ieqn3.gif"/ and HCO+ was detected down to ALT="${A} {{\rm{v}}}\lt 0.2\,\mathrm{mag}$" SRC="apjlab6337ieqn4.gif"/ , where atomic gas and dark molecular gas start to dominate. Multiple transitions measured in absorption toward 3C454.3 allow for a direct determination of excitation temperatures T ex of 4.1 and 2.7 K, for CO and for HCO+, respectively, which are close to the cosmic microwave background and explain their being undercounted in emission surveys. A stronger linear correlation was found between ALT="${N} {{\mathrm{HCO}} {+}}$" SRC="apjlab6337ieqn5.gif"/ and ALT="${N} {{{\rm{H}}} {2}}$" SRC="apjlab6337ieqn6.gif"/ (Pearson correlation coefficient P ∼ 0.93) than that of N CO and ALT="${N} {{{\rm{H}}} {2}}$" SRC="apjlab6337ieqn7.gif"/ (P ∼ 0.33), suggesting HCO+ is a better tracer of H2 than CO in diffuse gas. The derived CO-to-H2 conversion factor (the CO X-factor) of (14 ± 3) × 1020 cm-2 (K ALT="$\mathrm{km} {{\rm{s}}} {-1}$" SRC="apjlab6337ieqn8.gif"/ )-1 is approximately six times larger than the average value found in the Milky Way.
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Citations: 14
Authors: 14
Affiliations: 11
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Environmental
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Cross Sectional Study