Publication | Closed Access
A Study of the Physics and Chemistry of L134N
132
Citations
53
References
2000
Year
EngineeringPhysicsAtmospheric ScienceNatural SciencesCloud DynamicAstrochemistryChemical StatePhysical ChemistryCloud PhysicMain Group ChemistryDark Cloud L134nChemistryQuantum ChemistryMolecular Abundances
We have carried out a comprehensive and self-consistent study of the physical and chemical state of the core of the dark cloud L134N (L183), whose molecular abundances provide a standard against which chemical models may be compared. We used observations of the NH3(1, 1) and (2, 2) rotation-inversion transitions to estimate the kinetic temperature, which was found to be consistent with 10 K and not varying with position. Densities were determined from multitransition statistical equilibrium calculations for HC3N, N2H+, and CS. The average density toward all lines of sight was 2 × 104 cm-3. As found by previous studies, the emission from various molecular species peaks in different positions: SO and SO2 peak west of the central position, which is the location of the strongest emission from (e.g.) N2H+ and CH3OH, with a second peak occurring for NH3 and HC3N to the north of the center. The most striking abundance variations occur in a north-south cut through the core center for HC3N, C2H, CS, SO, and SO2. A north to south decrease in the abundance of HC3N and CS and a dramatic change in the CS/SO ratio, which has been shown to be a sensitive tracer of chemical evolutionary state, suggests that the north is at a younger evolutionary state than the south. Despite the "youth" of the N position, the CS/SO ratio suggests that it is still as "old" as or older than the most evolved region in TMC-1 (the northwest end of the ridge).
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
1994 | 1.3K | |
1982 | 999 | |
1981 | 424 | |
1997 | 412 | |
1997 | 343 | |
1982 | 336 | |
1998 | 333 | |
1997 | 276 | |
1974 | 271 | |
1998 | 267 |
Page 1
Page 1