TY - JOUR
T1 - The critical density and the effective excitation density of commonly observed molecular dense gas tracers
AU - Shirley, Yancy L.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015. The Astronomical Society of the Pacific. All rights reserved.
PY - 2015/7/6
Y1 - 2015/7/6
N2 - The optically thin critical densities and the effective excitation densities to produce a (Formula Presented.) spectral line are tabulated for 12 commonly observed dense gas molecular tracers. The dependence of the critical density and effective excitation density on physical assumptions (i.e., gas kinetic temperature and molecular column density) is analyzed. Critical densities for commonly observed dense gas transitions in molecular clouds (i.e., HCN 1−0, HCOþ 1−0, N2Hþ 1−0) are typically 1–2 orders of magnitude larger than effective excitation densities because the standard definitions of critical density do not account for radiative trapping and 1 Kkm=s lines are typically produced when radiative rates out of the upper energy level of the transition are faster than collisional depopulation. The use of effective excitation density has a distinct advantage over the use of critical density in characterizing the differences in density traced by species such as NH3, HCOþ, N2Hþ, and HCN, as well as their isotopologues; but, the effective excitation density has the disadvantage that it is undefined for transitions when Eu=k ≫ Tk, for low molecular column densities, and for heavy molecules with complex spectra (i.e., CH3CHO).
AB - The optically thin critical densities and the effective excitation densities to produce a (Formula Presented.) spectral line are tabulated for 12 commonly observed dense gas molecular tracers. The dependence of the critical density and effective excitation density on physical assumptions (i.e., gas kinetic temperature and molecular column density) is analyzed. Critical densities for commonly observed dense gas transitions in molecular clouds (i.e., HCN 1−0, HCOþ 1−0, N2Hþ 1−0) are typically 1–2 orders of magnitude larger than effective excitation densities because the standard definitions of critical density do not account for radiative trapping and 1 Kkm=s lines are typically produced when radiative rates out of the upper energy level of the transition are faster than collisional depopulation. The use of effective excitation density has a distinct advantage over the use of critical density in characterizing the differences in density traced by species such as NH3, HCOþ, N2Hþ, and HCN, as well as their isotopologues; but, the effective excitation density has the disadvantage that it is undefined for transitions when Eu=k ≫ Tk, for low molecular column densities, and for heavy molecules with complex spectra (i.e., CH3CHO).
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U2 - 10.1086/680342
DO - 10.1086/680342
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84934876216
SN - 0004-6280
VL - 127
SP - 299
EP - 310
JO - Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific
JF - Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific
IS - 949
ER -