Mapping Large-Scale CO Depletion in a Filamentary Infrared Dark Cloud
Audra K. Hernandez (1), Jonathan C. Tan (1,2), Paola Caselli (3),, Michael J. Butler (1), Izaskun Jimenez-Serra (4), Francesco Fontani (5),, Peter Barnes (1) ((1) Dept. of Astronomy, University of Florida, (2) Dept. of, Physics, University of Florida

TL;DR
This study maps CO depletion in a massive filamentary IRDC, revealing significant depletion at higher densities, which impacts the use of CO as a tracer for cloud mass and dynamics.
Contribution
First detailed mapping of CO depletion across a large filamentary IRDC, linking depletion to density and providing insights into initial conditions for star formation.
Findings
CO depletion factor increases with density
Mass surface densities from CO are lower than MIR extinction estimates
CO depletion affects the interpretation of molecular cloud dynamics
Abstract
Infrared Dark Clouds (IRDCs) are cold, high mass surface density and high density structures, likely to be representative of the initial conditions for massive star and star cluster formation. CO emission from IRDCs has the potential to be useful for tracing their dynamics, but may be affected by depleted gas phase abundances due to freeze-out onto dust grains. Here we analyze C18O J=1-0 and J=2-1 emission line data, taken with the IRAM 30m telescope, of the highly filamentary IRDC G035.39.-0033. We derive the excitation temperature as a function of position and velocity, with typical values of ~7K, and thus derive total mass surface densities, Sigma_C18O, assuming standard gas phase abundances and accounting for optical depth in the line, which can reach values of ~1. The mass surface densities reach values of ~0.07 g/cm^2. We compare these results to the mass surface densities derived…
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