Herschel/HIFI observations of spectrally resolved methylidyne signatures toward the high-mass star-forming core NGC6334I
M.H.D. van der Wiel, F.F.S. van der Tak, D.C. Lis, T. Bell, E.A., Bergin, C. Comito, M. Emprechtinger, P. Schilke, E. Caux, C. Ceccarelli, A., Baudry, P.F. Goldsmith, E. Herbst, W. Langer, S. Lord, D. Neufeld, J., Pearson, T. Philips, R. Rolffs, H. Yorke, A. Bacmann

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel/HIFI to observe methylidyne (CH) in NGC6334I, revealing diffuse, quiescent gas components with hyperfine-resolved spectra, contrasting with dense gas tracers and providing insights into the physical conditions of the surrounding molecular clouds.
Contribution
First detailed spectrally resolved CH observations in a high-mass star-forming region, distinguishing diffuse quiescent gas from dense, dynamic components.
Findings
CH traces quiescent, diffuse gas with lower abundance than in diffuse clouds.
Multiple absorption components indicate complex foreground and background cloud structures.
CH absorption features are consistent with diffuse clouds, contrasting with outflow signatures in other molecules.
Abstract
In contrast to extensively studied dense star-forming cores, little is known about diffuse gas surrounding star-forming regions. We study molecular gas in the high-mass star-forming region NGC6334I, which contains diffuse, quiescent components that are inconspicuous in widely used molecular tracers such as CO. We present Herschel/HIFI observations of CH toward NGC6334I observed as part of the CHESS key program. HIFI resolves the hyperfine components of its J=3/2-1/2 transition, observed in both emission and absorption. The CH emission appears close to the systemic velocity of NGC6334I, while its measured linewidth of 3 km/s is smaller than previously observed in dense gas tracers such as NH3 and SiO. The CH abundance in the hot core is 7 10^-11, two to three orders of magnitude lower than in diffuse clouds. While other studies find distinct outflows in, e.g., CO and H2O toward NGC6334I,…
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