CO Abundance Variations in the Orion Molecular Cloud
F. Ripple, M.H. Heyer, R. Gutermuth, R.L. Snell, C.M. Brunt

TL;DR
This study investigates how CO abundance varies with physical conditions in the Orion molecular clouds using infrared and spectral line data, revealing significant regional differences and implications for mass estimation.
Contribution
It provides detailed analysis of CO abundance variations across different regions of Orion, highlighting the impact of local conditions on molecular mass tracers and improving mass estimation methods.
Findings
13CO abundance varies by 100% in the cloud interior.
13CO reliably traces H2 mass in dense regions but not in envelopes.
CO luminosity to mass ratios are consistent with gamma-ray observations.
Abstract
Infrared stellar photometry from 2MASS and spectral line imaging observations of 12CO and 13CO J = 1-0 line emission from the FCRAO 14m telescope are analysed to assess the variation of the CO abundance with physical conditions throughout the Orion A and Orion B molecular clouds. Three distinct Av regimes are identified in which the ratio between the 13CO column density and visual extinction changes corresponding to the photon dominated envelope, the strongly self-shielded interior, and the cold, dense volumes of the clouds. Within the strongly self-shielded interior of the Orion A cloud, the 13CO abundance varies by 100% with a peak value located near regions of enhanced star formation activity. The effect of CO depletion onto the ice mantles of dust grains is limited to regions with AV > 10 mag and gas temperatures less than 20 K as predicted by chemical models that consider…
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