Mapping warm molecular hydrogen with Spitzer's Infrared Array Camera (IRAC)
David Neufeld, Yuan Yuan (JHU)

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that Spitzer's IRAC photometric maps can effectively trace warm molecular hydrogen in interstellar regions, revealing complex temperature distributions consistent with shock models.
Contribution
It shows that IRAC bands can be used to map H2 emission and infer temperature distributions, providing a new method for studying shocked interstellar gas.
Findings
IRAC Bands 3 and 4 are dominated by H2 S(5) and S(7) transitions.
IRAC Band ratios indicate a power-law distribution of gas temperatures.
Power-law index b varies from 3 to 6, matching bow shock models.
Abstract
Photometric maps, obtained with Spitzer's Infrared Array Camera (IRAC), can provide a valuable probe of warm molecular hydrogen within the interstellar medium. IRAC maps of the supernova remnant IC443, extracted from the Spitzer archive, are strikingly similar to spectral line maps of the H2 pure rotational transitions that we obtained with the Infrared Spectrograph (IRS) instrument on Spitzer. IRS spectroscopy indicates that IRAC Bands 3 and 4 are indeed dominated by the H2 v=0-0 S(5) and S(7) transitions, respectively. Modeling of the H2 excitation suggests that Bands 1 and 2 are dominated by H2 v=1-0 O(5) and v=0-0 S(9). Large maps of the H2 emission in IC433, obtained with IRAC, show band ratios that are inconsistent with the presence of gas at a single temperature. The relative strengths of IRAC Bands 2, 3, and 4 are consistent with pure H2 emission from shocked material with a…
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