<i>HERSCHEL</i>* MEASUREMENTS OF MOLECULAR OXYGEN IN ORION

2011-08-01
Goldsmith, Paul F.
Liseau, Rene
Bell, Tom A.
Black, John H.
Chen, Jo-Hsin
Hollenbach, David
Kaufman, Michael J.
Li, Di
Lis, Dariusz C.
Melnick, Gary
Neufeld, David
Pagani, Laurent
Snell, Ronald
Benz, Arnold O.
Bergin, Edwin
Bruderer, Simon
Caselli, Paola
Caux, Emmanuel
Encrenaz, Pierre
Falgarone, Edith
Gerin, Maryvonne
Goicoechea, Javier R.
Hjalmarson, Ake
Larsson, Bengt
Le Bourlot, Jacques
Le Petit, Franck
De Luca, Massimo
Nagy, Zsofia
Roueff, Evelyne
Sandqvist, Aage
van der Tak, Floris
van Dishoeck, Ewine F.
Vastel, Charlotte
Viti, Serena
Yıldız, Umut
We report observations of three rotational transitions of molecular oxygen (O-2) in emission from the H-2 Peak 1 position of vibrationally excited molecular hydrogen in Orion. We observed the 487 GHz, 774 GHz, and 1121 GHz lines using the Heterodyne Instrument for the Far Infrared on the Herschel Space Observatory, having velocities of 11 km s(-1) to 12 km s(-1) and widths of 3 km s(-1). The beam-averaged column density is N(O-2) = 6.5 x 10(16) cm(-2), and assuming that the source has an equal beam-filling factor for all transitions (beam widths 44, 28, and 19 ''), the relative line intensities imply a kinetic temperature between 65 K and 120 K. The fractional abundance of O-2 relative to H-2 is (0.3-7.3) x 10(-6). The unusual velocity suggests an association with a similar to 5 '' diameter source, denoted Peak A, the Western Clump, or MF4. The mass of this source is similar to 10 M-circle dot and the dust temperature is >= 150 K. Our preferred explanation of the enhanced O-2 abundance is that dust grains in this region are sufficiently warm (T >= 100 K) to desorb water ice and thus keep a significant fraction of elemental oxygen in the gas phase, with a significant fraction as O-2. For this small source, the line ratios require a temperature >= 180 K. The inferred O-2 column density similar or equal to 5 x 10(18) cm(-2) can be produced in Peak A, having N(H-2) similar or equal to 4 x 10(24) cm(-2). An alternative mechanism is a low-velocity (10-15 km s(-1)) C-shock, which can produce N(O-2) up to 10(17) cm(-2).
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Citation Formats
P. F. Goldsmith et al., “<i>HERSCHEL</i>* MEASUREMENTS OF MOLECULAR OXYGEN IN ORION,” ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, vol. 737, no. 2, pp. 0–0, 2011, Accessed: 00, 2025. [Online]. Available: https://hdl.handle.net/11511/115945.