Download - ISM & Astrochemistry Lecture 1

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Page 1: ISM & Astrochemistry Lecture 1

ISM & AstrochemistryLecture 1

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Interstellar Matter

• Comprises Gas and Dust

• Dust absorbs and scatters (extinguishes) starlight

Top row – optical images of B68

Bottom row – IR images of B68

Dust extinction is less efficient at longer wavelengths

– Astrochemistry is the study of the synthesis of molecules in space and their use in determining the properties of Interstellar Matter, the material between the stars.

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Interstellar Gas

• HII (H+) Region – T ~ 104 K, n ~ 10-2 cm-3

Surround hot starsPhotoionised by stellar UV photonsMajor ion is H+. Other ions:He+, C+, N+, O+, etcNo photons with energy > IP(H) =

13.6 eV permeate the ISM.

Triffid Nebula (M20)

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Interstellar Gas• Coronal Gas - T ~ 106 K, n ~ 10-2 cm-3

Detected in UV observations of highly ionised atoms

such as OVI (O5+) which has IP = 114 eV.Fills about 20% of volume of the Galaxy.Thought to be produced by interacting supernova

remnants.

SN Remnant in the Large Magellanic Cloud

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Diffuse Interstellar CloudsTemperature: 80-100K

Density: 102 cm-3

Slab-like, thickness ~ 1019 cm

Clouds permeated by UV radiation

- with photon energies less than IP(H)

Carbon is photoionised

f(e-) ~ 10-4

Cloud mostly atomic

f(H2) < 0.3

Few simple diatomics – CO, OH, CH, CN, CH+

f(M) ~ 10-6-10-8 The Pleiades

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Interstellar Gas

• Giant Molecular Clouds (GMCs)T ~ 10-50 K, n ~ 105 - 107 cm-3, <n> ~ 6 102 cm-3

Material is mostly molecular. About 100 molecules detected. Most massive objects in the Galaxy.

Masses ~ 1 million solar masses, size ~ 50 pc

Typically can form thousands of low-mass stars and several high-mass stars.

Example – Orion Molecular Cloud, Sagittarius,

Eagle Nebula

1 pc = 3.1 1018 cm = 3.26 light years

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Interstellar GasThe Orion Nebula

Optical picture of Orion Nebula (M42)

Image of the Orion Molecular Cloud in Carbon Monoxide – size 30 light years (2 times larger in the sky than the full moon

The Constellation of Orion

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Star-Forming Hot CoresDensity: 106 - 108 cm-3

Temperature: 100-300 K

Very small UV field

Small saturated molecules: NH3, H2O, H2S, CH4

Large saturated molecules: CH3OH, C2H5OH, CH3OCH3

Large deuterium fractionation

Few molecular ions - low ionisation ?

f(CH3OH) ~ 10-6

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Dark Interstellar Clouds

• Dark Clouds - T ~ 10 K, n ~ 1010 - 1012 m-3

Not penetrated by optical and UV photons. Little ionisation. Material is mostly molecular, dominant species is H2. Over 60 molecules detected, mostly via radio astronomy.

Masses 1 – 500 solar masses, size ~ 1-5 pcTypically can form 1 or a couple of low-mass

(solar mass) stars.

B68: A dark cloud imaged in the IR by the VLT

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Dark Interstellar Clouds

Infrared and radio telescopes are best used to study star formation

Infrared image

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Interstellar Dust

• Interstellar extinction

- absorption plus scattering

- UV extinction implies small (100 nm) grains

- Vis. Extinction implies normal (1000 nm) grains

- n(a)da ~ a-3.5da

- Silicates plus carbonaceous grains

- Mass dust/Mass gas ~ 0.01

- Dense gas – larger grains with icy mantles

- Normal – nd/n ~ 10-12

- Within interstellar clouds, characterise extinction of UV photons by the visual extinction, AV, measured in magnitudes

- Iλ = I0λexp(-Aλ)

The interstellar extinction curve

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Interstellar Ices

Mostly water ice

Substantial components:

- CO, CO2, CH3OH

Minor components:

- HCOOH, CH4, H2CO

Ices are layered

- CO in polar and non-polar

ices

Sensitive to f > 10-6

Solid H2O, CO ~ gaseous H2O, CO

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Interstellar Gas Phase Abundances

H 1.0(D 1.6e-5)He 0.1C 0.000073N 0.00002O 0.00018S <1e-6Mg, Si, Fe, < 1e-9

IS Gas is oxygen-rich – O/C > 1

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Evolved StarsIRC+10216 (CW Leo)• Nearby (~130 pc) high mass-

loss carbon star (AGB)• Brightest object in the sky at 2

microns – optically invisible• Carbon dust envelope detected

out to 200’’ = 25,000 AU ( ~ 1 lt yr)

• Molecular shells at ~ 1000 - 4000 AU

• >60 molecules detected: CO, C2H2, HC9N ...

• Newly discovered anions C8H-,

C6H-, C4H- , C3N- , C5N-, CN-

• Recent detections of H2O, OH and H2CO

Figures from Leao et al. (2006) Lucas and Guelin et al. (1999)

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Protoplanetary DisksObserved directly around low-mass protostars

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PPD Schematic

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Protoplanetary Disks

Thin accretion disks from which protostar forms

Inflow from large radii (300 AU) onto central protostar

Temperature of outer disk is cold (10 K)

n(H2) ~ 105 – 1014 cm-3

Molecular gas is frozen on to dust grains in outer disk

Temperature of inner disk is ~ 100 K at 10 AU, ~1000 K at 1 AU

Ices evaporate in inner disk