OH emission from warm and dense gas in the Orion Bar PDR
J. R. Goicoechea, C. Joblin, A. Contursi, O. Berne, J. Cernicharo, M., Gerin, J. Le Bourlot, E. A. Bergin, T. A. Bell, M. Rollig

TL;DR
This study reports the first detection of hydroxyl radical (OH) emission in the Orion Bar PDR, revealing warm, dense gas conditions and suggesting OH formation driven by FUV radiation in small, exposed structures.
Contribution
First detection of OH emission in the Orion Bar PDR, linking it to warm, dense gas and FUV-driven photochemistry with detailed radiative transfer modeling.
Findings
OH emission correlates with high-J CO and CH+ lines
OH arises in small, warm, dense gas regions near the FUV-irradiated edge
OH/H2O ratio exceeds 1 due to photodissociation effects
Abstract
As part of a far-infrared (FIR) spectral scan with Herschel/PACS, we present the first detection of the hydroxyl radical (OH) towards the Orion Bar photodissociation region (PDR). Five OH rotational Lambda-doublets involving energy levels out to E_u/k~511 K have been detected (at ~65, ~79, ~84, ~119 and ~163um). The total intensity of the OH lines is I(OH)~5x10^-4 erg s^-1 cm^-2 sr^-1. The observed emission of rotationally excited OH lines is extended and correlates well with the high-J CO and CH^+ J=3-2 line emission (but apparently not with water vapour), pointing towards a common origin. Nonlocal, non-LTE radiative transfer models including excitation by the ambient FIR radiation field suggest that OH arises in a small filling factor component of warm (Tk~160-220 K) and dense (n_H~10^{6-7} cm^-3) gas with source-averaged OH column densities of ~10^15 cm^-2. High density and…
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