Hot and diffuse gas near the Galactic center probed by metastable H 3 + Thomas R. Geballe Gemini Observatory Miwa Goto Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Dissociative Recombination of Cold H 3 + and its Interstellar Implications  T. Oka (University of Chicago), T. R. Geballe (Gemini Observatory)  A. J.
Advertisements

Implications of the H H 2  H 2 + H 3 + reaction for the ortho- to para-H 3 + ratio in interstellar clouds Kyle N. Crabtree, Lt. Col. Brian A. Tom,
Estimated SOFT X-ray Spectrum and Ionization of Molecular Hydrogen in the Central Molecular Zone of the Galactic Center Masahiro Notani and Takeshi Oka.
Ionization of H 2 by X-rays in the Central Molecular Zone of the Galactic Center Masahiro Notani and Takeshi Oka Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics,
The nature of the dust and gas in the nucleus of NGC 1068.
Benjamin McCall and Takeshi Oka University of Chicago Kenneth H. Hinkle National Optical Astronomy Observatories Thomas R. Geballe Joint Astronomy Centre.
銀河中心の H 3 + Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics Department of Chemistry and The Enrico Fermi Institute, The University of Chicago 岡 武史 岡コロキウム 東京工業大学、
Linear Analysis of Infrared CO Spectra Takeshi Oka Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics and Department of Chemistry, The Enrico Fermi Institute, University.
The Non-Thermal Rotational Distribution of Interstellar H 3 + (ApJ, in press ) Takeshi Oka and Erik Epp, Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics, and.
The (3, 3) metastable rotational level of H 3 + Takeshi Oka Department of Chemistry and Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics The Enrico Fermi Institute,
Galactic Center Region Concentrated stars and interstellar matter High Energy Density (gravity, MHD, kinetic) Strong magnetic field :B ~ mG High external.
Revelation of a vast amount of warm (~ 250 K) and diffuse (≤ 100 cm -3 ) gas and high ionization rate (ζ > s -1 ) in the Central Molecular Zone.
Submillimeter Astronomy in the era of the SMA, 2005, Cambridge, MA Observations of Extragalactic Star Formation in [CI] (370  m) and CO J=7-6 T. Nikola.
H 3 +, in planetary Ionospheres: Emission Spectrum 岡 武史 Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Departmen of Chemistry and The Enrico Fermi Institute,
Hot and Diffuse Gas near the Galactic Center Probed by Metastable H 3 + Thomas R. Geballe Gemini Observatory Miwa Goto Max Planck Institute for Astronomy.
Warm and diffuse gas and high ionization rate in the Galactic center revealed by observation of H 3 + Takeshi Oka Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics.
The first discovered negative molecular ion, C 6 H - M. C. McCarthy et al, ApJ, 652:L 吳宇智 (Yu-chih, Wu) Department of Physics, NTHU 12,19,2006.
H3+H3+. Search for hot and bright stars for H 3 + spectroscopy Near the Galactic center Takeshi Oka Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics and Department.
Hot and Diffuse Gas near the Galactic Center Probed by Metastable H 3 + Thomas R. Geballe Gemini Observatory Miwa Goto Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie.
Warm and Diffuse Gas and High Ionizzation Rate Near the Galactic Center from 140 pc West to 85 pc East of Sgr A* 66th OSU International Symposium, June.
Laboratory spectroscopy of H3+
October, 1970 H2S2H2S2 March 28-31, 1966, APS Durham, NC April 22, 1966, Invitation to give a seminar.
Physics, Chemistry and Astronomy of H 3 + Royal Society Discussion Meeting And the Satellite Meeting January 16-18, 2006.
H 3 + : A new probe of the Galactic center Takeshi Oka Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics and Department of Chemistry, The Enrico Fermi Institute,
The Galactic center region Concentrated stars and interstellar matter High energy density (gravity, MHD, kinetic) Strong magnetic field :B ~ mG High external.
Two Sightlines toward the Galactic Center with Remarkable H 3 + and CO Spectra Takeshi Oka Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics and Department of Chemistry,
H 3 + in the Central Molecular Zone of the Galactic Center: Revelation of a New Category of Gas Takeshi Oka Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics and.
Thermalization of interstellar CO Takeshi Oka Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics and Department of Chemistry The Enrico Fermi Institute, University.
H 2 » H Scoville and Sanders 1987 Molecule or Atom? The Central Molecular Zone CMZ H2H2 H H+H+
Takeshi Oka Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics And Department of Chemistry The Enrico Fermi Institute, University of Chicago University of Illinois,
Interstellar H 3 + in Metastable Rotational Levels Takeshi Oka and Erik Epp Department of Chemistry and Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics, The Enrico.
H 3 +, the new probe for ionization rate  Takeshi Oka Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics and Department of Chemistry The Enrico Fermi Institute,
H3+H3+. H 3 +, a new astrophysical probe: Revelation of warm and diffuse gas near the Galactic center Takeshi Oka Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics.
OBSERVATIONS OF INTERSTELLAR HYDROGEN FLUORIDE AND HYDROGEN CHLORIDE IN THE GALAXY Raquel R. Monje Darek C. Lis, Thomas Phillips, Paul F. Goldsmith Martin.
ASTR112 The Galaxy Lecture 8 Prof. John Hearnshaw 12. The interstellar medium (ISM): gas 12.1 Types of IS gas cloud 12.2 H II regions (diffuse gaseous.
ERIC HERBST DEPARTMENTS OF PHYSICS, CHEMISTRY AND ASTRONOMY THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY Gas and Dust (Interstellar) Astrochemistry.
The Interstellar Medium and Interstellar Molecules Ronald Maddalena National Radio Astronomy Observatory.
Absorption line survey toward the Galactic center II Miwa Goto Max-Planck-Institut fuer Astronomie Heidelberg, Germany contribution from Subaru to the.
The Central Molecular Zone The central region of our Galaxy contains a super-massive black hole and a high concentration of stars and interstellar matter.
H 3 + : A Case Study for the Importance of Molecular Laboratory Astrophysics Ben McCall Dept. of ChemistryDept. of Astronomy.
Molecular Survival in Planetary Nebulae: Seeding the Chemistry of Diffuse Clouds? Jessica L. Dodd Lindsay Zack Nick Woolf Emily Tenenbaum Lucy M. Ziurys.
T. Oka, PRL 45,531 (1980) What is H 3 + ?  2y 2x  Equilateral triangle structure  Simplest stable polyatomic molecule  No stable excited electronic.
Radio Astronomy Emission Mechanisms. NRAO/AUI/NSF3 Omega nebula.
Revelation of a vast amount of warm and diffuse gas and high ionization rate in the Central Molecular Zone of the Galactic center by the Infrared Spectrum.
Spectroscopy of H 3 + and CO toward the Galactic center Takeshi Oka, Christopher P. Morong, Department of Astronomy And Astrophysics and Department of.
ASTR112 The Galaxy Lecture 7 Prof. John Hearnshaw 11. The galactic nucleus and central bulge 11.1 Infrared observations (cont.) 11.2 Radio observations.
H 3 + Toward and Within the Galactic Center Tom Geballe, Gemini Observatory With thanks to Takeshi Oka, Ben McCall, Miwa Goto, Tomonori Usuda.
Observations of H 3 + The Initiator of Interstellar Chemistry Benjamin McCall Oka Ion Factory University of Chicago Thomas Geballe Gemini Observatory (HI)
EXPANDING DIFFUSE MOLECULAR GAS IN THE CENTRAL MOLECULAR ZONE OF THE GALACTIC CENTER PROBED BY H th International Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy.
FC10; June 25, 2010Image credit: Gerhard Bachmayer Constraining the Flux of Low- Energy Cosmic Rays Accelerated by the Supernova Remnant IC 443 N. Indriolo.
Further studies of λ Diffuse Interstellar Band Takeshi Oka, Lew M. Hobbs, Daniel E. Welty, Donald G. York Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics,
Analysis of OH +, H 2 O +, and H 3 + in a Diffuse Molecular Cloud Toward W51 Nick Indriolo 1, David Neufeld 1, Maryvonne Gerin 2, & Tom Geballe 3 1 – Johns.
Electron-molecule collisions in harsh astronomical environments Alexandre Faure 1 & Jonathan Tennyson 2 1 Université de Grenoble / CNRS, France 2 University.
The Chemistry of PPN T. J. Millar, School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Manchester.
ASTR112 The Galaxy Lecture 9 Prof. John Hearnshaw 12. The interstellar medium: gas 12.3 H I clouds (and IS absorption lines) 12.4 Dense molecular clouds.
Observation Of Nuclear Spin Selection Rules In Supersonically Expanding Plasmas Containing H 3 + Brian Tom, Michael Wiczer, Andrew Mills, Kyle Crabtree,
Central Molecular Zone (CMZ): the Treasure House of H 3 + Takeshi Oka Thomas R. Geballe Gemini Observatory Miwa Goto Max Planck Institute for Astronomy.
A Search for Interstellar H2DO+
AND HIGH H2 IONIZATION RATE
MODIFICATIONS OF THE RELATION BETWEEN
Nick Indriolo1, Thomas R. Geballe2, Takeshi Oka3, and Benjamin J
Can We Use Metastable Helium to Trace the Cosmic-Ray Ionization Rate?
Probing Cosmic-Ray Acceleration and Propagation with H3+ Observations
Observation of H3+ in the Diffuse Interstellar Medium
LARGE PICTURE OF THE GALACTIC CENTER STUDIED BY H3+:
Can We Use Metastable Helium to Trace the Cosmic-Ray Ionization Rate?
Investigating the Cosmic-Ray Ionization Rate in the Galactic Interstellar Medium through Observations of H3+ Nick Indriolo,1 Ben McCall,1 Tom Geballe,2.
Morphology of the Galactic center from the H3+ spectrum:
International Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy
Thermalization of interstellar CO
Presentation transcript:

Hot and diffuse gas near the Galactic center probed by metastable H 3 + Thomas R. Geballe Gemini Observatory Miwa Goto Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie Tomonori Usuda Subaru Telescope Benjamin J. McCall University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Subaru Telescope, August 3, 2005 Takeshi Oka Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics and Department of Chemistry The Enrico Fermi Institute, The University of Chicago Astro-ph/

The Central Molecular Zone (CMZ) R ~ 200 pc M ~ 5 × 10 7 M ⊙ Dominantly molecular n(H 2 ) > 10 4 cm -3 Volume filling factor % of total ISM Hot gas T ~ 300 K High velocity dispersion Low dust temperature Mezger, Duschl, Zylka, A&A Rev. (1996) Morris, Serabyn, ARA&A (1996) Genzel, Hollenbach, Townes (1994) CMZ OH, H 2 CO, CO, CS, NH 3, HCN H3+H3+

The central 30 pc of the CMZ Yusef-Zadeh, Morris, AJ (1987) Nagata et al. (1990) Okuda et al. (1990) The Quituplet

Salient features of H 3 + Protonated H 2 (P.A.=4.4 eV), simplest polyatomic molecule Equilateral triangle, Infrared active 4μ band Production H 2 → H e H H 2 → H H rate = ζn(H 2 ) DestructionDense cloud H CO → H 2 + HCO + Diffuse cloud H e → H + H + H Simple chemistry n(H 3 + ) constant N(H 3 + ) → L cloud dimension ζ n(H 3 + ) ∽ ζ N(H 3 + ) → ζL ioniozation rate Ubiquity Dense cloud N(H 3 + ) = 3.6 × cm -2 A V Diffuse cloud N(H 3 + ) = 4.4 × cm -2 A V The most abundant molecular ion in the Universe Initiator of interstellar chemistry H O → OH + + H 2 OH + → H 2 O + → H 3 O + → H 2 O

2005 Hot and Diffuse Clouds near GC Probed by Metastable H 3 + Oka, Geballe, Goto, Usuda, McCall, Astro-ph/ – 2002 Ubiquity, Dense and Diffuse Clouds McCall, Geballe, Hinkle, Oka Historical sketch of H 3 + observation Oka, PRL. 45, 531 Laboratory Spectrum1996 Geballe, Oka, Nature 384, 334 Interstellar H 3 +, Discovery H H2H2 H3+H Metastable H 3 +, Discovery Goto, McCall, Geballe, Usuda, Kobayashi, Terada, Oka PASJ, 54,

Dense clouds McCall, Geballe, Hinkle Oka, ApJ 522,338(1999) Diffuse clouds McCall, Hinkle, Geballe, Moriarty-Schieven, Evans, Kawaguchi, Takano, Smith, Oka, ApJ 567, 391 (2002)  Per H 3 + more abundant in Diffuse Clouds N(H 3 + ) ~ 3.6 ×10 12 cm -2 A V N(H 3 + ) ~ 4.4 ×10 13 cm -2 A V

Sightlines toward the CMZ Mezger, Duschl, Zylka (1996) Georgelin, Georgelin (1976) A V = 25 ~ 40 Cotera et al. (2000) Toward Sgr A * A V ~ 30 [A V ] DISM ~ 20, [A V ] MC ~ 10 Whittet et al. (1997) L DISM : L MC ~ 200 : 1 N(H 3 + ) DISM : N(H 3 + ) ~ 20 : 1

Discovery of H 3 + toward GC GC IRS 3 GCS 3-2 Geballe, McCall, Hinkle, Oka, ApJ 510, 215 (1999) 2.5 × cm × cm -2

J K 32.9 K 361 K (J, K) The ideal energy levels of H ortho I = 3/2 para I = 1/2 (3, 3) metastable level (1, 1) ground level Δk = ± 3 forbidden transitions 27.2 days (2, 2) unstable level Oka et al. ApJ, (1971) (1, 0) Oka & Epp, ApJ 613, 349 (2004) 0 ±1 ±2 ±3 k N crit ~ 200 cm -3 H H 2 → (H 5 + )* → H H 2

Discovery of metastable H 3 + Goto, McCall, Geballe, Usuda, Kobayashi, Terada, Oka PASJ, 54, 951 (2002) The Subaru Telescope

Telescopes and Spectrometers UKIRT 3.8 m CGS4 8 km s -1 Mauna Kea Subaru 8 m IRCS 15 km s -1 Mauna Kea Gemini S 8 m Phoenix 5 km s -1 Cerro Pachon

ground unstable ground unstable metastable CO T ~ 250 K n ≤ 100 cm -3 EMR

The Expanding Molecular Ring Kaifu, Kato, Iguchi, Nature (1972) Scoville, ApJ (1972) Whiteoak, Gardner, MNRAS (1979)

Dimension or the hot and diffuse clouds ζ L = 2k e N(H 3 + )(n C /n H ) SV R X /f = 3.7 × 10 4 R X /f cm s -1 R X = (n C /n H ) GC /(n C /n H ) SV ~ 3 – 10, f ~ 1 COBE DIRBE Sodroski et al. ApJ 452, 262 (1995) Arimoto, Sofue, Tsujimoto, PASJ 48, 275 (1996) ζ L = (1 – 4) × 10 5 cm s -1 If L = 20 pc, ζ = (2 – 6) × s -1 Extremely high ionization rate Liszt, A&A 398, 621 (2003)

Nagata, Hyland, Straw, Sato, Kawara, ApJ 406, 501 (1993)

Main Results so far Vast amount of gas High temperature: T ~ 250 K Low Density: n ~ 100 cm -3 H 3 + total column density: 4.3  cm -2 ¾ in CMZ, ¼ in intervening spiral arms ½ of H 3 + in CMZ in the Expanding Mol. Ring Pathlength ~ 50 pc Ionization rate ~ 5  s -1 Volume filling factor of dense clouds « 0.1 [M ISM ] CMZ /[M ISM ] total « 0.1

Hot and Diffuse Gas, Questions abound What is the heating mechanism? How is the pressure balanced? How are they related to molecular clouds and H II regions? What is the relation to X-ray (  -ray) sources? What is their role in the strong magnetohydrodynamic effects?

Interstellar Space Dense (molecular) clouds Diffuse clouds New class of clouds? Galactic Center Expanding molecular ring Galactic nucleus New class of clouds? Extragalactic Object Obscured AGN Magellanic clouds Circumstellar Space Planetary nebulae protoplanetary nebulae Planet Planets Proto-planet Exo-planet Treasure Hunting

Discovery of high temperature (T ~ 250 K), low density (n ≤ 100 cm -3 ) clouds Oka & Epp, ApJ 613,349 (2004)

Clouds v LSR range N( H 3 + ) Temperature Density (km s -1 ) (10 14 cm -2 ) (K) (cm -3 ) -100 km s → ± ± 70 ≤ km s → ± ± 100 ≤100 0 km s → ± ± 100 ≤ 200 (1, 1) ground level CMZ and spiral arms (3, 3) metastable level All CMZ (2, 2) unstable level Neither High temperature Low density -100 km/s 0 km/s -50 km/s

Gemini South

1911 Discovery J. J. Thomson 1916 n(H 3 + ) » n(H 2 + ) Arthur Dempster 1925 H H 2 → H + H 3 + Thorfin Hogness +, prediction 1961 Interstellar H 3 +, prediction Earl McDaniel 1973 H X → H 2 + HX + Herbst, Klemperer, Watson Hot and Diffuse Clouds near GC Probed by Metastable H 3 + Ubiquity Dense and Diffuse Clouds Historical Sketch of H 3 + T.G. B.M. M.G Oka, PRL. 45, 531 Laboratory Spectrum1996 Geballe, Oka, Nature 384, 334 Interstellar H 3 +, Discovery H H2H2 H3+H3+ H 3 + in the (3, 3) metastable level

Galactic plane Quintuplet

(1, 1) ground level CMZ and spiral arms (3, 3) metastable level All CMZ (2, 2) unstable level Neither CO All spiral arms High temperature Low density -100 km/s 0 km/s -50 km/s