Is H3+ cooling ever important in primordial gas?
S. C. O. Glover, D. W. Savin

TL;DR
This study evaluates the potential role of H3+ as a coolant in primordial gas, finding it generally minor but potentially dominant under intense cosmic ray or X-ray irradiation conditions.
Contribution
The paper introduces a detailed model and new cooling function for H3+ to assess its significance in primordial gas cooling processes.
Findings
H3+ is usually the third most important coolant in dense primordial gas.
H3+ contributes no more than a few percent to total cooling under typical conditions.
Strong cosmic ray or X-ray fluxes can make H3+ the dominant coolant, though such conditions are rare.
Abstract
Studies of the formation of metal-free Population III stars usually focus primarily on the role played by H2 cooling, on account of its large chemical abundance relative to other possible molecular or ionic coolants. However, while H2 is generally the most important coolant at low gas densities, it is not an effective coolant at high gas densities, owing to the low critical density at which it reaches local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE) and to the large opacities that develop in its emission lines. It is therefore possible that emission from other chemical species may play an important role in cooling high density primordial gas. A particularly interesting candidate is the H3+ molecular ion. This ion has an LTE cooling rate that is roughly a billion times larger than that of H2, and unlike other primordial molecular ions such as H2+ or HeH+, it is not easily removed from the gas by…
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