Anomalous Diffuse Interstellar Bands in the Spectrum of Herschel 36. I. Observations of Rotationally Excited CH and CH+ Absorption and Strong, Extended Redward Wings on Several DIBs
Julie Dahlstrom (1), Donald G. York (2), Daniel E. Welty (2), Takeshi, Oka (2), L. M. Hobbs (2), Sean Johnson (2), Scott D. Friedman (3), Zihao, Jiang (2), Brian L. Rachford (4), Reid Sherman (2), Theodore P. Snow (5),, Paule Sonnentrucker (3) ((1) Carthage College

TL;DR
This study reports unique broad diffuse interstellar bands and excited molecular lines toward Herschel 36, suggesting radiative excitation of DIB carriers and providing insights into their physical conditions and the influence of local radiation fields.
Contribution
It presents the first observation of excited CH+ and CH molecules and extended DIBs in absorption, proposing radiative pumping as a mechanism affecting DIB profiles.
Findings
Detection of excited CH+ and CH molecules in interstellar gas.
Observation of unusually broad and extended DIBs near Herschel 36.
No new strong DIBs detected despite intense UV radiation.
Abstract
Anomalously broad diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs) at 5780.5, 5797.1, 6196.0, and 6613.6 A are found in absorption along the line of sight to Herschel 36, the star illuminating the bright Hourglass region of the H II region Messier 8. Interstellar absorption from excited CH+ in the J=1 level and from excited CH in the J=3/2 level is also seen. To our knowledge, neither those excited molecular lines nor such strongly extended DIBs have previously been seen in absorption from interstellar gas. These unusual features appear to arise in a small region near Herschel 36 which contains most of the neutral interstellar material in the sight line. The CH+ and CH in that region are radiatively excited by strong far-IR radiation from the adjacent infrared source Her 36 SE. Similarly, the broadening of the DIBs toward Herschel 36 may be due to radiative pumping of closely spaced high-J rotational…
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