A Herschel/HIFI Legacy Survey of HF and H2O in the Galaxy: Probing Diffuse Molecular Cloud Chemistry
P. Sonnentrucker (STScI), M. Wolfire (UMd), D.A. Neufeld (JHU), N., Flagey (Institute for Astronomy), M. Gerin (Obs. de Paris, Sorbonne, University), P. Goldsmith (JPL), D. Lis (Obs. de Paris, Sorbonne University), and R. Monje (Caltech)

TL;DR
This survey uses Herschel/HIFI data to analyze HF and H2O in diffuse molecular clouds, confirming their co-location, and highlights the importance of both gas-phase and grain-surface chemistry in the interstellar medium.
Contribution
It provides the most uniform survey of HF and H2O in the Galactic disk, demonstrating their co-distribution and the role of grain-surface reactions in diffuse cloud chemistry.
Findings
HF and H2O distributions follow each other closely.
H2O can be used as a tracer of H2 within a factor of 2.5.
Both gas-phase and grain-surface chemistry are necessary to explain observations.
Abstract
We combine Herschel observations of a total of 12 sources to construct the most uniform survey of HF and H2O in our Galactic disk. Both molecules are detected in absorption along all sight lines. The high spectral resolution of the Heterodyne Instrument for the Far-Infrared (HIFI) allows us to compare the HF and H2O distributions in 47 diffuse cloud components sampling the disk. We find that the HF and H2O velocity distributions follow each other almost perfectly and establish that HF and H2O probe the same gas-phase volume. Our observations corroborate theoretical predictions that HF is a sensitive tracer of H2 in diffuse clouds, down to molecular fractions of only a few percent. Using HF to trace H2 in our sample, we find that the N(H2O)-to-N(HF) ratio shows a narrow distribution with a median value of 1.51. Our results further suggest that H2O might be used as a tracer of H2 -within…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric Ozone and Climate · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Photocathodes and Microchannel Plates
