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HCO+ in the Helix Nebula

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1 HCO+ in the Helix Nebula
Lindsay N. Zack Lucy M. Ziurys Department of Chemistry Department of Astronomy Steward Observatory Arizona Radio Observatory University of Arizona

2 Planetary Nebulae Glowing shell of gas and plasma formed by low to intermediate mass stars in their final stage of evolution Strong UV radiation field from central star Shapes and sizes vary

3 Chemistry in Planetary Nebulae
Strong UV field should destroy molecules in PNe Several molecules have been detected in young PNe Primarily ions and radicals Survival in clumps of gas and dust? Molecules Identified in PNe CO CN CCH N2H+ HCN CH H2 CH+ HNC OH HCO+ H2O H2CO C2H2 CO+ CS C2H C3H2 SiS Tenenbaum et al., in preparation

4 The Helix Nebula Age: ~12,000 years Distance: ~200 pc
Angular Size: ~1000” Very old Lots of dust and gas Atomic gas : Ha, N II, O I, C I Molecular gas: CO and vibrationally excited H2 Interesting structure Cometary globules

5 CO (J = 2-1) Map of the Helix
Multiple Velocity Components Young et al. 1999

6 Why HCO+ ? m = 3.89 D High critical density (ncr ~ 105 cm-3) indicates that HCO+ emission is present in dense gas around the Helix CO: m = 0.11 D; ncr ~ 103 cm-3 Dense gas is shielding and can preserve molecules

7 Mapping the Helix in HCO+
Goals… Complete a fully sampled map in HCO+ (J = 1-0) Identify “new” clumps of dense gas that may be chemically interesting Examine the kinematic structure of the Helix Determine density and temperature distributions Model HCO+ densities with LVG analysis Examine chemistry of old PN in detail

8 HCO+ Observations The Map 1000″ x 800″ region
ARO 12m on Kitt Peak HCO+ (J = 1-0) GHz Optimal project for new ALMA-type Band 3 receiver Tsys < 200 K KP 12m The Map 1000″ x 800″ region 35″ spacing (half beam-size) 775 positions total 500 kHz resolution filterbanks 3s rms noise level < 20 mK

9 Further Observations ARO SMT on Mt. Graham HCO+ (J = 3-2) 267.5576 GHz
ALMA-type Band 6 receiver SMT Examine select positions in the Helix and compare to J = 1-0 transition

10 HCO+ J = 1-0 (125, 185) (390, -30) (130, -180) (-15, 270) (-240, -100)
(-120, 240) (-372, 0) (-300, -200) HCO+ J = 1-0

11 Helix Nebula (NGC 7293) HCO+ J = 1 → 0 CO J = 1 → 0 Young et al. 1999
~16% complete 125 positions finished 3s rms noise level < 20 mK Beam Size (70″) Beam Size (70″) CO J = 1 → 0 Young et al. 1999

12

13 Summary Chemistry in evolved planetary nebulae is more active and complex than originally thought Presence of HCO+ (J = 3-2) indicates that very dense gas clumps exist in the Helix HCO+ (J = 1-0) is widespread across the Helix and can be used to identify more chemically interesting areas

14 Acknowledgements Dr. Lucy Ziurys Dr. DeWayne Halfen
Ziurys Group: Robin Pulliam, Emmy Tenenbaum, Ming Sun, Gilles Adande, Jessica Dodd, Jie Min, Matthew Bucchino, Brent Harris ARO operators, engineers, and staff Funding: NASA and NSF


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