Water and ammonia abundances in S140 with the Odin satellite
C. M. Persson, M. Olberg, A. Hjalmarson, M. Spaans, J. H. Black, U., Frisk, T. Liljestrom, A. O. H. Olofsson, D. R. Poelman, and Aa. Sandqvist

TL;DR
This study uses Odin satellite data and advanced modeling to analyze water and ammonia abundances in the S140 PDR, revealing their distribution, origin from dense clumps, and providing predictions for future Herschel observations.
Contribution
It introduces a combined observational and physi-chemical modeling approach to determine water and ammonia distributions in the S140 PDR, highlighting the clumpy structure and outflow contributions.
Findings
Water and ammonia emission originate mainly from high-density clumps.
Mean water abundance in the PDR is approximately 5x10^-9.
Water and ammonia show similar emission profiles and are associated with the same clumps.
Abstract
We have used the Odin satellite to obtain strip maps of the ground-state rotational transitions of ortho-water and ortho-ammonia, as well as CO(5-4) and 13CO(5-4) across the PDR, and H218O in the central position. A physi-chemical inhomogeneous PDR model was used to compute the temperature and abundance distributions for water, ammonia and CO. A multi-zone escape probability method then calculated the level populations and intensity distributions. These results are compared to a homogeneous model computed with an enhanced version of the RADEX code. H2O, NH3 and 13CO show emission from an extended PDR with a narrow line width of ~3 kms. Like CO, the water line profile is dominated by outflow emission, however, mainly in the red wing. The PDR model suggests that the water emission mainly arises from the surfaces of optically thick, high density clumps with n(H2)>10^6 cm^-3 and a clump…
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