Star Formation in Extreme Environments: The Effects of Cosmic Rays and Mechanical Heating
R. Meijerink, M. Spaans, A.F. Loenen, and P.P. van der Werf

TL;DR
This study investigates how extreme cosmic ray and mechanical heating conditions in environments like Arp 220 affect molecular chemistry and line emissions, revealing specific chemical signatures and line behaviors.
Contribution
It provides detailed PDR model predictions for high CR and mechanical heating environments, highlighting unique chemical and line emission signatures.
Findings
Fine-structure lines are similar across different heating rates in UV-rich environments.
High mechanical heating boosts HCN and H2O abundances.
Certain molecular ions trace cosmic ray rates and distinguish from X-ray effects.
Abstract
Context: Molecular data of extreme environments, such as Arp 220, but also NGC 253, show evidence for extremely high cosmic ray (CR) rates (10^3-10^4 * Milky Way) and mechanical heating from supernova driven turbulence. Aims: The consequences of high CR rates and mechanical heating on the chemistry in clouds are explored. Methods: PDR model predictions are made for low, n=10^3, and high, n=10^5.5 cm^-3, density clouds using well-tested chemistry and radiation transfer codes. Column densities of relevant species are discussed, and special attention is given to water related species. Fluxes are shown for fine-structure lines of O, C+, C, and N+, and molecular lines of CO, HCN, HNC, and HCO+. A comparison is made to an X-ray dominated region model. Results: Fine-structure lines of [CII], [CI], and [OI] are remarkably similar for different mechanical heating and CR rates, when already…
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