Herschel observations of interstellar chloronium
David A. Neufeld (JHU), Evelyne Roueff (Paris-Meudon), Ronald L. Snell, (UMass), Dariusz Lis (Caltech), Arnold O. Benz (ETH Zurich), Simon Bruderer, (MPIfETP), John H. Black (Chalmers), Massimo De Luca (LERMA), Maryvonne Gerin, (LERMA), Paul F. Goldsmith (JPL)

TL;DR
This study used Herschel observations to detect interstellar chloronium in various galactic sources, revealing higher-than-expected abundances that challenge existing chemical models of interstellar chlorine chemistry.
Contribution
First detection of interstellar chloronium absorption and emission in multiple sources, with abundance measurements exceeding theoretical predictions, highlighting gaps in current chemical models.
Findings
Chloronium accounts for 4-12% of gas-phase chlorine in observed clouds.
Detected chloronium emission in Orion regions with column densities around 10^13 cm^-2.
Observed chloronium abundances are about ten times higher than model predictions.
Abstract
Using the Herschel Space Observatory's Heterodyne Instrument for the Far-Infrared (HIFI), we have observed para-chloronium (H2Cl+) toward six sources in the Galaxy. We detected interstellar chloronium absorption in foreground molecular clouds along the sight-lines to the bright submillimeter continuum sources Sgr A (+50 km/s cloud) and W31C. Both the para-H2-35Cl+ and para-H2-37Cl+ isotopologues were detected, through observations of their 1(11)-0(00) transitions at rest frequencies of 485.42 and 484.23 GHz, respectively. For an assumed ortho-to-para ratio of 3, the observed optical depths imply that chloronium accounts for ~ 4 - 12% of chlorine nuclei in the gas phase. We detected interstellar chloronium emission from two sources in the Orion Molecular Cloud 1: the Orion Bar photodissociation region and the Orion South condensation. For an assumed ortho-to-para ratio of 3 for…
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