The Relationship Between the Dust and Gas-Phase CO Across the California Molecular Cloud
S. Kong (1), C. J. Lada (2), E. A. Lada (1), C. Rom\'an-Z\'u\~niga, (3), J. H. Bieging (4), M. Lombardi (5), J. Forbrich (6), J. F. Alves (6), ((1) Astronomy Department, University of Florida, (2) Harvard-Smithsonian, Center for Astrophysics, (3) Instituto de Astronom\'ia

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between dust extinction and CO gas emission in the California Molecular Cloud, revealing temperature-dependent CO depletion, variations in the X-factor, and the influence of hot gas on CO-to-H2 conversion efficiency.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of spatial variations in CO abundance and the X-factor in the CMC, highlighting temperature effects and UV photodissociation processes.
Findings
X-factor varies with extinction and temperature.
Hot regions show a constant X-factor around 1.5×10^{20} cm^{-2} (K km s^{-1})^{-1}.
X_{CO} correlates inversely with excitation temperature, X_{CO} ∝ T_{ex}^{-0.7}.
Abstract
A deep, wide-field, near-infrared imaging survey was used to construct an extinction map of the southeastern part of the California Molecular Cloud (CMC) with 0.5 arc min resolution. The same region was also surveyed in the CO(2-1), CO(2-1), CO(2-1) emission lines at the same angular resolution. Strong spatial variations in the abundances of CO and CO were found to be correlated with variations in gas temperature, consistent with temperature dependent CO depletion/desorption on dust grains. The CO to CO abundance ratio was found to increase with decreasing extinction, suggesting selective photodissociation of CO by the ambient UV radiation field. The cloud averaged X-factor is found to be X 2.53 10 , somewhat higher than the Milky Way average. On…
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