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Excitation of H2 in NGC 253 Marissa Rosenberg
Co-authors: Paul van der Werf and Frank Israel Leiden Observatory, Netherlands
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Overview Extragalactic molecular gas H2 excitation H2 in NGC 253
Comparison of H2 morphology H2 diagnostic ratio Comparison of shock and PDR models Conclusions
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Molecular Gas Excitation
Star formation happens in GMCs H2 is most abundant Many H2 vibrational transitions in NIR
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Cold H2 But most H2 is cold and hard to directly observe!
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Cold H2 Get around this by observing CO transitions.
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Excitation of Hot H2 UV Excitation (Fluorescence) “Top Down”
Absorption of energetic photon Cascade downwards emitting in NIR Tgas = 10,000s K
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Excitation of Hot H2 Shock Excitation “Bottom up”
Collisional excitation behind shock front Cooling Lines emit in NIR Tgas = 1000s K
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Excitation of Hot H2 Degeneracy
If density is high, molecules are thermalized Even if UV excitation is dominant, appears as if shock excited.
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NGC 253 3.5 Mpc Barred Spiral Starburst ~0.5kpc Super Star Cluster
(Region 2) Kinematic Center (Region 3) Pixel = 1.8 parsec
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H2 in NGC 253 Say here,” So our main question is, “What is exciting the hot H2 gas in NGC 253”
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Other Diagnostic Tracers
K Band Continuum Continuum Emission -> dust Traces underlying, older stellar population
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Other Diagnostic Tracers
[FeII] 1.64 μm Trapped in dust grains Released into ISM by high v shocks (SNR)
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Other Diagnostic Tracers
Brγ (HI 7->4) λ < 912 Å, 13.6 eV Traces most massive O stars H2: λ < 1100 Å, 11.2 eV
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Other Diagnostic Tracers
PAHs 3.3 μm λ < 4200 Å, for NC>50 Traces slightly less massive O and B stars ISAAC Continuum subtracted PAH 3.28 μm map
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Mini Summary No morphological similarities between:
[FeII] No SN excitation Brγ No excitation from Lyman photons PAHs Strong morphological correlation Excitation by slightly less massive O and B stars More quantitative measurement needed
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Diagnostic Ratio 1-0 S(1) 2-1 S(1) 2-1 S(1)/1-0 S(1) v=1, Tex=6741 K
PDR Models: (Black & van Dishoeck 1987) Shock Models: (Shull & Hollenback 1978)
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Diagnostic Ratio
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Diagnostic Ratio Important Constraint: Ratio < 0.2 55% of H2 flux
Exclude brightest Brγ flux regions Maximum of 33% of gas is shock excited
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Normalized Column Density
H2 Excitation Diagram Normalized Column Density Boltzmann Distribution with: Upper Energy Level (103 K)
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Shock Models Low Velocity Low Density Low Velocity High Density
Medium Velocity Low Density Medium Velocity High Density Shull & Hollenbach (1978)
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PDR Models
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Observations
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Conclusion The hot H2 gas is predominately excited by fluorescence
Shocks may play a role in isolated regions A maximum of 33% of the gas is shock excited This result applies to molecular gas around the edge of molecular clouds, does not dictate excitation of gas inside the clouds.
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